Word: freeing
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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Eloquent were the appeals for an unmuzzled press and free speech in a meeting at Tremont Temple last Monday when a Harvard student stepped to the platform and in the name of the principle just enunciated demanded a hearing. The uproar of protest that followed ended in his ejection from the hall, unheard...
...past have been singularly outside the ken of college men, students, graduates, and professors alike, for the reason that students have come to college very largely from private schools or endowed academies. It is only recently that Harvard has, been receiving fully half her Freshmen from the free public high schools. In the state universities and those where entrance is by certificate instead of by examination, the proportion of students from the free public schools is very much greater. The result is that these schools are rapidly becoming of much more interest to college men. But they have always been...
...Randolph Coolidge, Jr., '83, will address the University League of Nations Society in Peabody Hall, Phillips Brooks House, tonight at 7.45. Mr. Coolidge was one of the originators of the League of Free Nations in New England and was prominent at the meetings of the recent Congress in Boston. All members of the University are invited to be present...
...England Congress for a League of Free Nations opens at the Tremont Temple this morning at 10.30 o'clock. President Lowell will be the presiding officer at the first session, and addresses will be made by Hon. William Howard Taft, Dr. Henry Van Dyke '94, Governor, Coolidge, and Mayor Andrew J. Peters...
There are at least three feasible methods of attack. The first is that of compulsory undergraduate membership, the second that of administration by the college with free membership to all Harvard men, the third simply that of making the Union worth while, of placing in the very centre of the University such a vitally interesting institution as to compel membership out of sheer honest interest. The only true Harvard plan is the last method. The writer believes that he can outline a fair way to victory were such a plan adopted...