Word: count
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...collection for the Harvard Surgical Unit taken up between the halves of the Princeton game last Saturday amounted to a little less than $5,500. According to the preliminary count taken yesterday of the money already turned in, a total of $5,400 had been reached, and there remained a sum of between $50 and $100 to be counted. This sum is nearly $6,000 less than the total of $11,432.39 contributed at the Yale game in the Stadium last year...
...Department in regard to the Training Units and that the official order establishing units of the Reserve Officers' Training Corps at that institution will go into effect this mouth. The Yale Battalion, like the Harvard Regiment, is to be disbanded, but the work already done by its members will count toward a commission in the Reserve Corps. In addition the new course, which is to be under the direction of Colonel Danforth, U. S. A., former commander of the Yale Battalion, will count toward an academic degree...
...elected Captain Paul Koenig of the German super-submarine "Deutschland," an honorary member of the club. A committee will be appointed to go to New London to present the Captain with a medal and a shingle signifying his membership. Among the honorary members of the Verein are included Count von Bernstorff, Dr. Carl Muck and all the exchange professors from Germany...
...geographical distribution. A vote for Hughes in Maine is not the same thing as a vote for Hughes in Alabama. Now the vote of Harvard students who are qualified voters of other states would normally be distributed all over the country, and only a few of their votes would count in any one choice of an elector. Supposing then that we are really foreigners in Massachusetts, how can we claim the right to concentrate our vote for Presidential electors here in this one spot and possibly alter the result in this district, thus making it appear that Cambridge has chosen...
...interested, either as subscribers or contributors, is limited--yet Harvard has two literary magazines. If they unite, the number of candidates for literary and business departments would at least equal the present aggregate. It ought to be greater, for the impetus gained from such a union should count for something. Although both publications are good, a higher standard would be the natural result of a combination. Furthermore, the cost of publishing would be less and the subscription rate much lower than the combined price...