Word: opinion
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...because people have had no opportunity to see the convincing results. In the Preparedness Parade on May twenty seventh and at the Regimental Review on Memorial Day, the men in the Harvard Regiment will take what amounts to their final military examination. Past performances will not count in the opinion of the examiner, or, in other words, the public, for the verdict will be passed solely on these final exhibitions...
...Collegian under another name. The names of the editors did not appear, but the three Junior editors of the Collegian were summoned before the Faculty. There and in the pages of the Advocate the right of the students to publish a paper which should express undergraduate opinion, even when that opinion differed radically from the views of the Faculty, was strongly and successfully asserted. The counsel of the more liberal members of the Faculty prevailed; the edict of expulsion was not enforced; and the Advocate was not suppressed. The founding of the Advocate is a story worth repetition because...
...cannot conceive it possible that the hymn may imbibe into its essence any coarse or unpleasant aspect because it resounds oftener in the ears of students; and the band hopes that such a community spirit in the rendering of the hymn may call into new life the "wholesome conservative opinion of many of the older members" of Harvard University. ALBION C. DEAN...
...United States. Students are seeking institutions offering satisfactory courses on these subjects. There is particularly in consequence of recent changes a growing interest in international affairs. Educational institutions desirous of meeting the demands are accordingly providing courses upon international law and international relations; but the committee is of the opinion that the importance of the subject in general merits a much greater development...
...coach less hampered by other duties than Mr. Clark would assist the men more in their development, but the question of coaching can only be judged adequately when the coach is given a reasonable amount of material to work with. The chief fault lies, as usual, with public opinion, which should, and must in the future, make life as unpleasant for the armchair-athlete as it is today for the able-bodied "slacker" in Europe...