Word: new
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...adequate staff of specialists, and with a body of students capable of advanced study based on a college education and experience in teaching and school administration. The training of college students for their first work as teachers must probably remain at least in part an undergraduate business; but the new school will offer a year of graduate work to those college men and women who can undertake it in preparation for their first school posts...
...Pousland--IV, Fogg Lect.-rm. Mr. Lincoln--VII, Harvard 3 French 7, Sever 23 Geography 1, Pierce 202, 304 German 1a, I, Sever 17 German 1b, Sever 17 German 5, Fogg Lect.-rm. Government 6b, Sever 29, 35, 36 Government 31, Robinson Hall Greek G, Sever 18 History 32, New Lect. Hall Robinson Hall Latin Br, Sever 18 Latin 8, Sever 18 Mathematics D Mr. Knapp--I, Harvard 5 Mr. Tucker--II, Zool. Lect.-rm. Mathematics IV I, Zool. Lect.-rm. Mathematics 2 II, Sever 20 Mathematics 25, Sever 6 Meterology 3, Geol. Mus. 43 Philosophy 12, Emerson J Semitic...
...French 18, Sever 17French 21, Sever 23German 1c 1, Sever 23Government 1a, New Lect. Hall, Harvard 2, 3, 5, 6 Emerson A, F, D, JGreek 8, Sever 18History A1, Andover BLatin 12, Sever 18Mathematics V, Sever 24Mineralogy C, Geol. Mus. 12Music 1a, Sever 17Physics 4b, Sever 21Romance Philology 4, Sever 24Zoology 4, Zool. Lab. 42Zoology 7a, Bussey Inst.2 P. M.Mineralogy A, Geol. Mus. 12Friday, June 6.Celtic 2, Sever 18Chemistry 13, Emerson JFine Arts 4a-5a, Robinson HallFine Arts 9c, Zool. Lect.-rm.French 1Mr. Place--II, Sever 17Mr. Pousland--IV, Sever 17, 18French 10, Emerson JGeology 14, Emerson JGovernment 16, New...
...this "unrepresentative short-coming," the editors of the Magazine quote carelessness in cutting and proof-reading as though they believed that accuracy typified Harvard undergraduates. The CRIMSON has not previously been informed that it was so unrepresentative that the College is about to repudiate it and foster a new daily, which fact the Harvard Magazine has taken upon itself to declare, representing as it does the best of undergraduate thought and desires...
...Boston as the Magazine now receives from a certain type of "instructor." The CRIMSON has been developed by such editors as George S. Mandell, Franklin D. Roosevelt, Owen Wister, Barrett Wendell, Thomas W. Lamont, W. Roscoe Thayer, Robert Bacon, and countless others. It is difficult to believe that a new and untried journal could solve the problems which these men gave much of their undergraduate careers to unravelling...