Word: deal
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...first division is Fine Arts, and includes books on artists and on early Greek sculpture. Secondly comes "Harvard Studies in English," the publication of which has but recently been taken over by the Press. The books in this division deal with the analysis and the place of the various characters of English novels in literature...
Practice for the Gym team has now begun regularly, and in a few days a meeting will be held to elect a captain. R. F. Wiley '20 is the only undergraduate in College who has been on a pre-war gym team, but there is a great deal of promising new material on hand. Coach schrader expects many more candidates to report for the team, now that the football season is over. Practice for the candidates will be held regularly three afternoons from 5 to 6.30 o'clock and one evening a week...
...gatherings and each new Freshman class. The triumph of this motive made him a master financier and the foremost private citizen of the Commonwealth. He desired "men who could be trusted." What could not be done if we worked entirely with trustworthy men? Only with such did he deal; and in so far as he could, he labored that all Harvard men should "remain within the truth." In his address to the Class of 1923, scarcely a month ago, he voiced this desire...
...calling of the National Industrial Conference at Washington, of which he was a member. Explaining the attitude of the employers, Mr. Fish contended that the conference broke up because the labor group was unwilling to allow the employees generally to choose the agency through which they might deal with their employers, but insisted in substance that only the trade and labor unions should be recognized, thus excluding the shop committees. The employers, on the other hand, were willing to admit the principle of collective bargaining, leaving to the employees in each instance the right in choose the agency by which...
...Harold J. Laski, whose radical opinions have given him a good deal of publicity, is, it might be explained, a young Englishman who has served the University during the past two or three years as a lecturer on history and a tutor in the Division of History, Government and Economics. During the current year he is giving lectures at Yale also. The brilliancy of his intellect and his capacity as a teacher are generally recognized, but his views on social and political topics run far afield from those which have usually been accounted orthodox, and his recent utterances...