Word: columns
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...CRIMSON stated in its editorial column some time ago, the Union Reading Room would be vastly more attractive if the magazines were kept up to date and accessible to readers. Recently I picked up four well-known magazines and found each a month or more out of date. Some covers with tempting titles were disappointingly vacant, other periodicals were there only in part, or a portion of a cover was the one sign that showed there had been something readable at a former date. A general appearance of carelessness about the filling of papers and magazines was evident. To members...
...another column is printed a review of "American Defense," a monthly magazine devoted to preparedness. Interest lies in the fact that its founders are University graduates. The originator of the scheme was C. S. Thompson '87, chairman of the board of trustees of the American Defense Society. The editor-in-chief is P. J. Roosevelt '13, and among the associate editors and contributors are R. W. Child '03, G. von L. Meyer '79, former secretary of the navy, and C. Stetson LL.B. '03, and Owen Wister...
...inconceivable, at this time, with all Europe locked in a death struggle, how any one can charge--as a pacifist does in another column--that the possibility of an invasion of the United States is a mere figment of the imagination. According to expert opinion, the present conflict will be over in two years and possibly sooner. Then either the Allies will triumph and the German menace will be permanently overwhelmed, or Germany will triumph and her menace will be a menace thrice increased. In the latter case, the utterances of German civil and military writers, as as well...
...communication column of the CRIMSON is designed to afford a free discussion of any not too trivial question. Serious articles on either side of a question are always welcome. When two or more articles take up an identical phase of a problem in a similar manner, however, the CRIMSON feels justified in only printing the best one of them. All articles should be signed by the writer's real name. The CRIMSON also feels at liberty to suppress armless, hopelessly written, trivial articles on any subject. Any contributor whose article is not published may learn the reason by inquiring...
...somewhat larger than last year's, 248 ballots being counted, as compared with 215 last year. The names of the men who were elected to the Class Committee, the Class Day Committee, and the Photograph Committee are announced in the complete list of Class Day officers in the adjoining column. The number of votes cast for each candidate follows...