Word: columns
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...this column yesterday morning the CRIMSON reminded students in the University of opportunities too often neglected, and suggested the cultivation of the habit of going to the valuable extra-curriculum activities in this community...
...cases to the courts; Mr. C. P. Howard attending to the preliminary investigations and preparation of these cases and counsel from the three great political parties assisting in the later stages. All men who have been so refused should notify Mr. Howard at the times stated in the notice column of the CRIMSON...
...CRIMSON a short time ago in this column fully explained the postion which it believed members of the University should take regarding the expression of personal opinion in the present European crisis. The astonishing proposal recently said to have been made to Professor Muensterberg concerning his withdrawal from the University has only put that position to the test. Little notice need be paid the proposal itself. Whether genuine or not, that it should even have been published is sufficient cause for regret and contempt. On the other hand, the opinion may gain strength in some quarters that the fact...
...fall of 1912 there appeared in this column a long comparison of the work done in the Law chool by Harvard men and students from other colleges. The comparison was occasioned by the fact that in that year not one of the men elected to the Harvard Law Review Association was a graduate of Harvard College. After a careful and thorough discussion the CRIMSON concluded that "the recent Review elections indicate a real deterioration in the quality of work done by Harvard graduates in the Law School. Such a deterioration presents a problem which all Harvard men are called upon...
...This column is devoted daily to the expressing of thoughts and opinions from undergraduate viewpoints. Much of its value and usefulness to the student body would immediately disappear if the thoughts expressed here were those of University authorities. As the students of the University have the privilege of expressing their own opinions, so have the professors--and this is just and proper...