Word: planning
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Even the fact that the editorial staff of the CRIMSON must find or make controversial material for their columns is not a sufficient excuse for the lack of understanding with which the question of a weekly board charge under the House Plan has been approached...
...University provides the House Plan--and the undergraduates accept it as the Senate "accepted" the invitation to the United States to join the World Court. Apparently it is felt that failure on the part of students to bring up objections to the Administration's projects would indicate a lack of independence...
Some suggestions for changes in the various details of House organization have been made and, naturally, will be made, which are of real value. But those made in regard to the board charge seem to be based on a misunderstanding. One of the primary advantages of the House Plan is that it can put a stop to continual "eating around", or rather that it affords an opportunity for congenial groups of men to have their meals, at board rates, in agreeable surroundings in the buildings in which they live. Perhaps it is not simply a contrary reaction which inspires...
...advantage of having the groups more wieldy, better organized. There will, perhaps, be more opportunity for the students to mingle with the faculty to have the lamp of truth in the very midst of their lives instead of only on the classroom fringe-for the so-called "inner-college" plan provides professors' rooms in the dormitories. This may prove a valuable stimulus to that class of students inherently brilliant, but also lazy, who would like to know some bother to find them...
Professor R. Dec. Ward '89, and Professor K. F. Mather are both members of a committee which is developing a plan whereby the progress in geological research during the past hundred years may be graphically depicted at the Chicago Century of Progress celebration...