Word: may
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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Although many changes and alterations of universal suffrage have been suggested, these are not advantageous because this principle lies at the bottom of our system of government. One way to render this plan more efficient is to reduce the number of nominees for whom one man may vote. On every ballot now presented there is a long list of men, many of whom are in all probability entirely unknown to the voter. If there are but five men to be elected, the voter is sure to be able to choose more competently. This system has proved successful wherever...
...Musical Club of the Department of Music will give its fifth annual concert on Wednesday evening, January 20, in the lecture room of the Fogg Art Museum. Applications for tickets may be sent to the treasurer, P. G. Clapp '09, Wadsworth...
...exclusive sale of tickets to members of the University for the Dramatic Club performance of "The Promised Land" has been extended for one day and the public sale will in consequence be postponed until Wednesday. Members of the University may obtain tickets at $1.50, $1.00 and $.50, at Stoughton 2 between 12 and 1.30 o'clock today, and from 9 A. M. to 6 P. M. tomorrow...
...arrangement between the educational department and the manufacturing and business interests, by virtue of which the education of boys and girls is continued along industrial lines after they leave the schools. The rules of labor unions in this country make any such arrangement impossible. The remedy for this evil may lie in the development of public sentiment. A new interest has recently been shown in vocational education, so called. This interest should be devoted entirely to the prevention of too early use of child labor...
This series is a repetition of the Hibbert lectures delivered by Professor James at Oxford last May. The course began with the exposition of the fundamental types of philosophical thinking and of monistic idealism, and proceeded to the discussion of the doctrines of the German philosophers, Hegel and Fechner, in the first four lectures. More modern subjects have been treated in the three later lectures, the titles being "The Compounding of Consciousness," "Bergson's Critique of Intellectualism," and "The Continuity of Experiences...