Word: contributors
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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Professor Parker is a contributor to zoological journals, dealing with anatomy and physiology of sense organs. He is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, Boston Society of Natural History, Academy of Natural Sciences, and many other scientific organizations...
...Eaton began a journalistic career on the staff of the Boston Journal and, at the end of two years, accepted a position in the dramatic department of the New York Tribune. He soon became known as a frequent contributor to the Atlantic Monthly, Everybody's and other magazines. In 1907 Mr. Eaton became dramatic critic of the New York...
...Porritt has been a frequent contributor to English and American periodicals, his writings appearing regularly in the North American Review, The Outlook, and other publications. Five years ago he published his History of the Unreformed House of Commons, a very comprehensive and scholarly work in two volumes. By the large amount of patient industry which it represented, the soundness of the opinions which it contained, and the vigorous style in which it was written, this work at once commanded wide attention, and it is mainly because of the accurate and broad scholarship displayed in these volumes that Mr. Porritt...
That the good to be derived from intercollegiate athletics far outweighs any harm that may be done by a certain amount of distraction from our studies the CRIMSON has always maintained. And yet, as our contributor argues this morning, interference with studies is far greater than it should be, simply because the athletes are abusing their privileges and hurting the very cause which they all have at heart. There is no necessity to curtail schedules, no necessity to deplore the natural tendency of mankind to test the strength and skill of one body of men against another; but there...
...from the undergraduates on Harvard's relations with the West, and on the advantages and disadvantages that a western man finds here, the CRIMSON is aiming at some practical solution of the recognized difficulty--or, as has been suggested, recognized misunderstanding -- against which the western man must contend. Our contributor this morning offers some instructive suggestions, which may well be added to those already advanced by and through the CRIMSON. No university can hope to appeal purely by academic reputation to the preparatory schools that are ignorant of the real conditions of its undergraduate life. That, of course, must play...