Word: morals
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...call the attention of its readers to the meeting which will be held tonight in the Brooks House to discuss plans for the Harvard delegation at the Northfield Conference. The Northfield idea, of a conference of college men, held in the most beautiful surroundings to discuss religious and moral problems as the student meets them, is one that is unique in its significance. For over twenty years now these conferences have been held at Northfield, and each year the enthusiasm brough back by the men who have been there has increased the interest in the work. The Northfield Conference, having...
...work has been greatly assisted by the Harvard Dramatic Club, which was founded in the spring of 1908 by E. B. Sheldon, R. E. Rogers, D. Carb and others, for the purpose of giving original plays by Harvard and Radcliffe undergraduates and recent graduates. It has been of great moral value in that it has stimulated the interest of students of the drama, and it has been of great practical value in that it has given them an opportunity to put their theoretical knowledge to an actual test. The so-called "47 Workshop" was founded last winter as an adjunct...
...speaker then explained a diagram based on statistics from the standing of graduates in the Law School and the Medical School as compared with their standing in the College. In explaining the moral of this diagram, President Lowell struck one of the keynotes of his speech: "It makes comparatively little difference what you study in College, but it makes a great deal of difference as to how well you study...
...realized that present facilities for indoor teams are wholly inadequate and that the present gymnasium is the weakest part of the University equipment. Consequently the class of 1910 pledges its moral and financial support to this cause and agrees to further it in every possible...
...give many students opportunities in hockey and baseball. Mr. Garcelon has tried to unearth lonely Freshmen, and, through physical exercise, to strengthen their bodies, clear their minds, and bring them into healthy association with their fellows. He maintains that a systematic effort would noticeably better the physical, mental, and moral condition of the whole class...