Word: hearings
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...CRIMSON competition offers an exceptional opportunity for becoming familiar with all that is going no hear and leads to positions of responsibility in one of the most important non-athletic activities in which an undergraduate can be of service to the University. The competition is one of the longest in College, but we can assure those who consider entering it, that whether successful or not, they will never regret the experience or consider their time wasted...
...these. At the Faculty reception in the Union this evening, President Lowell will address the Freshman class. From him more than any other man can they receive a broad and rounded notion of the meaning and purpose of undergraduate life. The class should be present as a whole to hear...
...This is a difficult question which the CRIMSON is not altogether prepared to answer definitely, but we are inclined to think that the average student would prosper fully as well if a little more knowledge were forced down. This is a question on which we should be glad to hear further discussion...
...sincere belief that prowess in sports is intrinsically of greater value than intellectual achievement. Almost every undergraduate would be proud to be told that he was destined in after life to write a remarkable history, or to make a notable scientific discovery and would be shocked to hear that he was to be the best professional baseball player in the world; yet he often submits willingly to drudgery that would tend to prepare him for the latter, though recoiling from study that would fit him for intellectual work. This shows a disproportion between immediate ambition and relative permanent values, even...
...hear of the life of Professor Agassiz from one who knew him intimately and from one with whom he had much in common, is the opportunity which Major Higginson's talk in the Union this evening offers to its members...