Word: editor
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...former editor, Theodore Roosevelt '80, writes the leading article of the current Advocate. In vigorous language he urges that Harvard "establish as part of its curriculum an efficient system of thorough military training." A minority of zealous pacificists last year were able, mainly through the CRIMSON to spread the impression, to use Mr. Roosevelt's phrase, that Harvard men were taking the lead the wrong way in having "anything to do with the absurd and mischievous professional-pacificist or peace-at-any-price movements." The CRIMSON'S policy has evidently been reversed, how ever, and the quick organization...
...Rogers '18 goes so far indeed as to write a hectic letter to the editor, "War--and the Millenium," in which he asserts that "War is the raging drink of life and death, or hell and heaven, pressed by the hand of a God of Battles into a full cup." He also confides to the editor, "I am an ancient cave-man in my inmost soul. My heart is hot to drink the cup of wrath, to press the rue from the drunken bowl." But President Wilson in his message says that "If our citizens are ever to fight effectively...
...editorial room, which is on the right side of the main entrance, is about 35 feet long and 25 feet wide. The assignment editor's desk and table are separated from the rest of the room by an oak railing. The opposite corner of the room is partitioned off with glass to form the managing editor's office. The night editor's desk is in the centre of the editorial office...
Other works recently published or to be published in the near future are: "Some Problems in Market Distribution," by Arch Wilkinson Shaw, Lecturer in Business Policy and editor of "System"; "English Field Systems," by Howard Levi Gray '98, Assistant Professor of History; "The Supernatural in Tragedy," by Charles Edward Whitmore; Instructor in English, ready in December; and a translation of the "Vedanta System of Philosophy According to Shankara" of Paul Duessen, by James Haughton Woods '87, Professor of Philosophy...
...speak. Mrs. Kelley is a graduate of Cornell. In 1894 she received the additional degree of LL.B. from Northwestern University. For several years she was state inspector of factories in Illinois. Her work in this capacity attracted the attention of Socialist leaders throughout the world. She then became American editor of the Archiv fur Sozialegetzgebung, a German Socialist publication in Berlin. For over ten years Mrs. Kelley has been general secretary of the National Consumers' League, which has done so much towards the establishment of the open market in this country...