Word: dealing
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...members of the University who gave their lives in the great war. In previous issues of the CRIMSON, the plans for a new gymnasium, and a memorial shaft to be erected in a park on the west bank of the Charles River were briefly considered. This article will deal with the possibilities, offered by an auditorium as a memorial to the University's dead...
College undergraduates are noted for being casual. It is a great deal easier to sit around and wait for someone to start something than to walk up to the CRIMSON Office and buy your own bond. The canvassers should not have to spend their time prodding the laziness of those who intend to buy anyhow. We must all take more than a passive interest unless...
...social amusements to training of the highest order, the enormous value of which will become apparent as soon as the student is turned loose upon the world and is required to face it. The present movement at Yale will so lower the standard of these competitions that a great deal of their value will be removed. There are always more "big" jobs than there are men with the requisite ability to fill them--and this is particularly true in college. That is why we so frequently see a few men holding several important positions. By restricting the number of such...
...college authorities have exhibited a great deal of sagacity in declaring a holiday on April 25th, the day of the parade of the 26th Division. Perhaps this is putting the cart before the horse, for, judging by the class-rooms on the day of Wilson's visit to Boston-a few ambitions scholars would be the only signs of college life in Cambridge...
...Although it is not realized by the general public," said Mr. Arliss, "workshop plays, produced in the semi-privacy of a small theatre are unostentatiously 'eating their way' beneath the mass of unworthy plays which we have to deal with. By 'unworthy' plays I mean the type commonly known as what the public wants,' but which it really does not want at all. The frivolous, plotless play has been largely brought on by the war, under the excuse of giving people something they can follow without thought or effort; but in such light productions, the mind is much more liable...