Word: columns
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...weeks from today the Phillips Brooks House starts its annual fall clothing collection. In another column this morning the CRIMSON prints a list of institutions that profited by last year's collection and that show in themselves the value to the community of this excellent work. It will be well for men to set aside until the time of the collection such articles as they cannot use. If sold, these articles would bring but a trifling remuneration to the owner, whereas every suit or magazine collected by the committee will do its share in affording relief and amusement...
...wheedle the ambitious into English 18. The remaining two articles are a reasonable view of the football outlook by Mr. Watts, and a story. The editors ought of course to be very much more careful of their diction: "long pants" and "America's greatest educator" occur in one column of the editorials...
Seniors will assemble in front of Holworthy at 8.30 o'clock wearing caps and gowns and will form in a column of twos. The procession, led by the Class Day officers with the first marshal and the chairman of the Class Day Committee at the head, will march past Hollis and, crossing the Yard, go between Thayer and University to Appleton Chapel. On reaching the Chapel the procession will pass up the main aisle to the front. The Marshal and Chairman will then walk down the aisle dividing off the pairs into each pew. All will remain standing until...
...CRIMSON prints in another column a communication offering suggestions for improving the cheering at the Yale game. We agree with the writer that this should be the occasion of a greater demonstration, provided it is conducted in such a way as not to delay or interfere with the game. The success of a parade to the field, depends upon the disposition of a large number of undergraduates to make a slight personal sacrifice. As the game comes on the day before Class Day, many men, underclassmen as well as Seniors, will have friends in Cambridge, and it is hardly fair...
...communication suggesting the inappropriateness for most occasions of the opening lines of "Fair Harvard," which we print in another column this morning, deserves more attention than we are apt to realize at the first glance. Certainly when we stop to consider the meaning of these lines, so familiar to every Harvard man, we must admit their inappropriateness in nine cases out of ten. But it is one thing to criticise and another to construct. If new words were to be written, as the writer of the communication suggests, we feel that they should only be officially adopted after the most...