Word: obviously
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...comment to be made is obvious. If the University allows every expression of opinion, both from its Faculty and from lecturers brought by the student organizations, it cannot be accused of giving support, as a university, to the opinions of any. On the other hand, as soon as we begin to pick and choose we lay ourselves open to misconstruction, and, to my mind, well-founded adverse criticism. W. T. FISHER...
...work would lead to a Reserve Officers' Commission. In view of these topics, which it has raised, can the University justify its present dilatory methods in establishing a unit of the Reserve Officers' Training Corps? It would seem that the rules of fairness make the answer to this question obvious. G. H. SHAW...
...comfortable margin with one exception, which is Columbia. The latter contains such a great mass of cosmopolitan and representative students that the closeness of Columbia's straw-vote should be considered more seriously as a forecast of the actual result than the large majorities of other Eastern colleges where obvious influences explain the Hughes victories. Whether the nation's decision leases the Majority of Harvard men or the majority of Columbia men will actually make little difference. The important and most encouraging feature of the 1916 compaign has been the increased and active interest in American politics exhibited...
...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...
...sketches in prose Mr. Putnam's have vigor of both thought and expression, while Mr. Cabot's have neither. Mr. Davidson's story about the pianola girl is slight, perhaps obvious, to the critic, but certainly not to the "tired College student" and the "tired business man." Mr. Mardigan's letter on military science is forceful and true; it should be read by every man who intends to condemn the Regiment. "The Regiment is gone; unmourned, to be sure, but not unappreciated...