Word: currents
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...fifth annual meeting of the alumni chorus, the following officers were elected for the current year: president, E. S. Dodge '73; vice-president, G. Wigglesworth '74; secretary, H. H. Darling '89; treasurer, H. Lyman '86; musical director, W. A. Locke '69; directors at large, H. G. Pickering '69, R. H. Dana '74, G. A. Burdett '81, R. C. Cabot '89, R. L. Scaife '97, and D. G. Field...
...held on the question "Resolved, That capital punishment should be abolished in the United States." Since the same question will be argued in the interclass debates, everyone intending to try for the Sophomore team should be present. This is the first of a series of meetings at which important current questions will be discussed informally...
...During the three years in which the Exchange has been in operation the University has sent to the West Professors A. B. Hart '80, G. H. Palmer '64, and C. H. Moore '89; the second half of the current academic year Professor L. J. Henderson '98 will be the representation. According to the agreement the exchange Professor, during his stay at each college, takes one of the regular classes in his subject, teaching it as he would in the University. Professor Hart gave instruction in American History. Professor Palmer in Ethics, and Professor Moore in Latin Literature. Each visiting Professor...
...this point of view by finding English salvation in the British quality of "you-be-damnedness." That Harvard has it in individuals is evident from the somewhat daring editorials. There, for instance, R. G. N. avers that better poetry is now written in the college than is printed in current magazines. To judge by comparison with the current Atlantic he has some color of truth. B. P. Clark's "Nocturne" and E. E. Cumming's "Night" have at least greater freshness of descriptive material. The exotic quality of R. S. Nathan's "Evening"--a vague title, yet deserving a place...
...admitted without conditions shows a steady increase from 1911 to 1914. This goes hand in hand with the increase of candidates under the "new plan," by the workings of which a man is admitted without conditions or not at all. The total number of men admitted for the current academic year, with and without conditions, is larger than it has ever been before; and the total refused appears to have been surpassed only once before; namely last year. The total examined has jumped from 885, the figures attained in both 1913 and 1911, to 937. 1911 1912 1913 1914 Admitted...