Word: problems
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...works of art are so inestimably satisfying in each particular as to inhibit curiosity. I give the Monthly the highest praise when I say that I find nothing dependent for its value upon any "interest," either that which seeks the solution of some fictitious plot or of some human problem. Interests are easy and perceptions difficult, yet to experience the present is the end of all culture...
...Hall give employment to a very few men. Memorial and the Freshman Dormitories offer facilities for aiding large numbers more. Men both in the College and in the Graduate Schools constantly apply at the Student Employment Office for positions and have to be refused. This arrangement would solve the problem...
...long been a problem with directors of technical schools to make students see the advantages of knowledge and appreciation of things outside their own special field. The difficulties of instruction in the various fields of engineering have been mastered; but the engineering training has not yet been successful in making students able to meet social requirements easily. To solve this problem several innovations have been made. One is to urge and expect students to become familiar with the activities in the various fine arts which are available in the city. A library is being fitted up, designed especially for students...
...Bingham '16, First Marshal of the Senior class, said that the classes of 1916 and 1917 are facing a double problem. "The cry in all the colleges now is for class unity," he said, "but here we need to know not only our classmates, but the other men in our dormitories. You can't do this scattered all over Cambridge, but in the Yard dormitories we all know each other...
...communication column of the CRIMSON is designed to afford a free discussion of any not too trivial question. Serious articles on either side of a question are always welcome. When two or more articles take up an identical phase of a problem in a similar manner, however, the CRIMSON feels justified in only printing the best one of them. All articles should be signed by the writer's real name. The CRIMSON also feels at liberty to suppress armless, hopelessly written, trivial articles on any subject. Any contributor whose article is not published may learn the reason by inquiring...