Word: column
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...article on the relative scholarship of men from private and public schools, originally written for the Harvard Graduates' Magazine, and printed in another column, Mr. Addison has pointed out an important argument which has escaped many previous writers. This article should be brought to the notice of those who are interested in the subject, for it shows that mere statistics are misleading. We agree with the writer that the theory is obsolete which claims that "the proof of the intellectual superiority of the public to the private school men is to be found in the undoubted fact that in college...
...another column we print a communication concerning the question of examinations. Among its proposals for raising the standard of undergraduate scholarship the Student Council, in its most recent report, suggests that less emphasis be laid upon final examinations and that greater stress be placed upon frequent hour examinations. The Council maintains that the present system, with its unique emphasis on final examinations, puts a premium on irregular work and results in a vast amount of eleventh-hour "cramming" that makes easy the path of the professional tutor. In our editorial of May, 24, to which the writer of the communication...
...print in another column a communication concerning make-up mid-year examinations. We emphasized need of permanent reform in this direction some time ago. The communication this morning mentions the innovation, which was introduced for the benefit of those men who were absent from their mid-year examinations because of militia duty in Lawrence during the strike and who were, therefore, allowed to take their make-up examinations in April. In our previous editorial we pointed out the desirability of making this a permanent feature, and we hope with the writer of this morning's communication that the office will...
...especially interested in track athletics, and the CRIMSON, in the belief that a thorough discussion of the problem would be of interest and profit, has invited correspondence on the subject from the track coaches of several large colleges and universities. Some of this correspondence we are printing in another column. The comments received in reply to our questions on the matter represent the careful thought of men who are very closely connected with track athletics in this country and whose opinions are of the greatest value. In the replies received from seven prominent coaches, it is to be noted that...
...Divinity avenue and Frisble place. The main entrance is from Kirkland street, opening into a lower vestibule, with office-rooms on each side. Beyond a small rotunda is the Romanesque Hall, about 70 feet long, which will contain, among other valuable parts of the collection, the collosal Bernward Column. From the farther end of the Romanesque Hall an entrance leads into the Gothic Hall...