Word: one
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...Union, nor do we believe his presence there good taste. But we feel equally that any attack on the right of any member of the Faculty to say what he wants is to be resented. The Transcript is attempting to bring pressure to bear on Harvard to remove one of its instructors by stirring up parents "from Maine to California." We venture an opinion that these same parents place more trust in Harvard University than in the remarks of the Boston Transcript...
...One of the salient points of disagreement in the recent trouble was the question of affiliation with the A. F. of L. by an organization in the police department. Mr. Laski elsewhere propounds the doctrine of unchecked unionization and affiliation. Carry this theory to a further degree. After police, municipal employees, come federal and national employees, Why should not the Army or Navy unionize? An army strike for one tour of guard per year would increase the efficiency of the army surely...
...One objection to the proposed rink is its size, 62 by 160 feet. The Brooklyn Ice Palace's enclosure is 56 by 200 feet, and this was found to be rather too small in the game with Yale last year. The usual dimensions are 80 by 180 to 200 feet. Due to the small size of the proposed arena, there is some doubt as to whether Yale and and Princeton will be willing to play there...
...Physical Training Department to develop among undergraduates an interest in those sports that men will be able to play after they leave college. Tennis is foremost among such sports. Mr. Geer hopes that the Athletic Committee will consider favorably the question of making tennis one of the major sports. Director Geer is the fourth prominent advocate of this step. Only recently R. N. Williams, 2nd, '16, said that he favored such a move on the part of the Athletic committee. Williams was captain of the University team in his senior year, and later became national singles champion...
...Medical School appointments contain the name of a newcomer, William L. Moss, as Assistant Professor of Preventitive Medicine and Hygiene, for one year. Professor Moss graduated from the University of Georgia in 1901, and received his medical degree from Johns Hopkins in 1908, later serving in Base Hospital No. 6. The other appointments were; Robert B. Osgood, M. D., '99, as Instructor in Surgery, for three years, and Edwin A. Boyden, Ph. D., '16, as Assistant Professor of Comparative Anatomy, for five years...