Word: cannot
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...free lectures in this year's series at the Harvard Medical School come home so closely to all of us that it is a pity that they cannot be printed inexpensively and distributed where they will do the most good. Men of national standing in medicine and surgery have spoken many words of wisdom in these Sunday talks; that the people appreciate them was seen in the overflowing attendance at Dr. Joel Goldthwaite's lecture last Sunday. No better health text-book for the layman haws over been written than could be made up from these inspiring talks...
...prerequisite" is seemingly the cause of the greatest student opposition. Reduced to its lowest terms, this is the policy of keeping students out of certain advanced courses unless they have passed a certain series of other courses. In some cases its use is absolutely imperative. A man cannot study advanced chemistry or biology without a knowledge of the elements of the two subjects. But at Williams, the system of prerequisites makes it necessary for a man to take the elementary course in a group in order to be allowed to take any of the allied subjects branching from that group...
There will be a great deal of material which cannot be obtained until the last moment, so that in order not to stall the Class Album and prevent an early publication, it behooves every Senior to aid the committee as much as possible. This means that class lives which have not as yet been given to the Committee should be handed in at once and that appointments should not be put off any longer. These appointments can be made for any future time and will at least show the Committee which men have attended to the matter. The selection from...
...undergraduates, the building of a home for the Harvard Club of Boston does not appear in the same light as it does to a graduate. At the same time it is a move of such promise that the CRIMSON cannot help commenting on it. We are all bound together as Harvard men by our every-day life, and it is not until we have left College that we feel the need of an extension of Harvard fellowship into the general life of the community. To us this new club which is to be built near the corner of Commonwealth...
...these trusts. There have been five proposals to deal with them. President Taft has tried using the courts, but with very questionable success. The Progressives, and Mr. La Follette wish to regulate these and all public utilities. This plan has been tried in Milwaukee with little success, for we cannot regulate what does not belong to us. The Democrats would completely smash the trusts, and Mr. Roosevelt would oust the bad trusts and leave the good...