Word: normale
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...prose, one severe study, "A Legacy," by Dudley Poore, will realize its intensely disagreeable types and atmospheres. It has literary value. It recalls, however somewhat heavily, the psychological analysis of "Markheim." In romantic view, C. G. Paulding '18 perhaps best appeals to a normal college public with delicate reminiscence of a childhood love-dream. The author unfortunately at first sets an apparently older tone. There is entertainment also in Percival Reniers '16's article, "Speaking of Trifles," where his potpourri of forced daily themes resembles a theme corrector's nightmare. Of the prose pastels, "Charity" too obviously allies itself...
Under the strain of a lengthy examination, the handwriting of many students reverts to childhood forms; even under normal conditions, others seem never to have advanced beyond the elemental, unformed state. English F takes care of the worst cases, but the kind of penmanship that "gets by" in college--though even here a disadvantage to the writer--would, in later life, lose many a man his job. When an instructor runs through a pile of blue-books or a number of weekly themes, their neatness may not receive official notice, yet no matter what the content may be, orderly writing...
...collection taken at this time last fall a great variety of articles, including overcoats, coast, trousers, shoes, etc., were collected in great numbers. Enough was gathered up so that it was possible to answer appeals from such institutions as Tuskegee Institute of Tuskegee, Ala., and the Brewer Normal Institute of Greenwood...
...communication in Wednesday's CRIMSON urging that students of the University petition the legislature to permit them to vote for President in Massachusetts, if qualified elsewhere, should not pass without an obvious criticism. This matter of disqualification for voting by absence from one's normal voting place is a very serious matter, for not only students, but hundreds of thousands of men who earn their living by travelling, lose a vote enlightened by wider observation of conditions than is possible to their stay-at-home neighbors. But the solution does not lie in permitting them to vote wherever they...
There has been no change since Sunday in the condition of Edwin Ginn '18. The physicians in charge are satisfied with his progress, but are not yet ready to say whether or how much the disease has affected him. His temperature is still normal and he is taking an interest in outside news...