Word: needed
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...College activities. It is "across the street" from everywhere. We want our Union within the fence if possible, and in a position that will be worthy of it. One such precious site is still open, --the ground just south of Sever Hall. The private houses situated there at present need not interfere seriously with the proposed building. The ample space and the rising of the ground, would show off any fine building to splendid advantage. Though in reality not far from the Quincy street site, to which so much objection has been taken, and rightly, it is for practical purposes...
...hope to meet the increasing need by receiving increased endowments is natural, and in view of the immense sums recently given to new Western colleges, one wonders why the oldest is by comparison overlooked, but is there not a possible source of income, in the increase of students fees which has not been explored? Everyone knows that the fees paid by a student only meet a fraction of the cost of his tuition, but is it known whether the parents of our students are able and willing to bear a larger proportion of this cost? There are colleges where...
...following communication in today's Bulletin was suggested by a CRIMSON editorial, concerning Harvard's need of unrestricted endowment, which was reprinted in the Bulletin last week...
...Your article in last week's edition on Harvard's Need again calls attention to a pressing and important subject. We are told once again that the endowment of the College does not keep pace with its expansion, that it gives faster than it receives. May this always be its policy...
...which Professor Ashley points out the lamentable "lack of position" of the Harvard scholar and gives what he thinks are two reasons for it. The chief of these is the restriction of candidates to those who, in the language of the catalogue, are "in indigent circumstances" and "in need of aid,"--a restriction which brings it about that the scholarship at Harvard is not, as at Oxford, prevented "from being associated with poverty, or with the defective breeding which unfortunately poverty too often brings with...