Word: question
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...this country various military organizations have adopted this important precautionary measure. Recently an enterprising manager of a well-known baseball club had all his players receive the inoculations. The obvious question arises--if this precautionary, measure is so valuable to armies and to a civilian population in times of war--why is it not a good thing in the ordinary walks of life? We know that typhoid fever occasionally occurs even under the best of conditions...
...been remarkably free from typhoid fever and has been spared the unfortunate experiences of certain other colleges with this disease. At the present time with the system of frequent routine examinations of the water, milk and food supplies of our dining halls any epidemic is practically out of the question, yet sporadic cases acquired from outside creep in. Students almost without exception, take some food and water from other places than their regular eating place. Furthermore, in the summer, which is the typhoid season, the student population scatters and with the characteristic activity of young men their excursions are often...
...fifth University Forum of the year will be held in the Living Room of the Union tonight at 8 o'clock. The question for discussion is "Resolved, That this Forum approves the participation of Harvard men in summer military camps...
Three prizes, of $150; $100, and $50, have been offered by the American Protective Tariff League for essays by undergraduate students of senior classes in colleges and universities of the United States on the following subject: "Effects of the Underwood Tariff Law of 1913 as bearing upon the question: Protection versus Free-trade." Essays must be received at 339 Broadway, New York City, on or before May 1 of this year...
...Forum Committee has chosen as a subject for the last Forum of the year, the question of summer military camps. Judging from the discussion which was called forth by the recent editorials in the CRIMSON on the subject, there are few questions upon which Harvard men feel more keenly; and in view of the fact that the time is not far off when many will have to decide how to spend their vacations in this year of blood, no subject is of greater present moment. A mass meeting of students at Columbia recently adopted resolutions against the camps. Some time...