Word: readings
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...speakers were: R. Bradley B.G. '09, on "Railroading"; C.F. Snow B.G. '13, on "Industrial Organization"; G.E. Cole B.G. '13, of the Harvard Co-operative Society, on "Marketing"; and J.E. Hyde B.S. '12, on "Accounting," J.S. Spence B.G. '12, president of the Association, presided and A.S. James, secretary-treasurer read his report. Afterwards music and refreshments were provided...
...have read with great interest in a recent issue a letter from Mr. Henderson. Will you permit me, also an A.M. of Harvard, to reply. My experience with the Germans lies less along literary and scholarly lines than Mr. Henderson's, but I have been both a consular and diplomatic officer of the United States and as such it has been my lot to come more or less into contact with German officials. I regret that my personal observations as to what Germany wants are quite different from those of Mr. Henderson. My impression, gathered from contact with German officials...
...Germany from November 7, 1913 to July 28, 1914. I was under contract to complete by October 1, 1914 a volume on Germany for a series to be called "Present Day Histories." I had made up my mind that my chief source of inspiration should be the newspapers. I read them unremittingly, morning, noon and night. I subscribed, from January 1, 1914, on, to the Zeitungsarchiv which, in a daily and monthly edition, gives the gist of the important articles from 120 newspapers of all shades of opinion from Social Democratic to stock conservative. It can be consulted...
...report touches on many other points worthy of comment--the need of new chemistry buildings, the raising of the tuition fee, the union with the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, etc. For this reason it should be read with care by all who are interested in the work of the University...
Yesterday the CRIMSON had its mid-year initiation. An unclassified student, who has been in College since the first of the year, and who writes for a Boston paper on a space basis sent to his paper a story purporting to be about it that read like war news and that was untrue in many of its statements. As a matter of fact, no one was injured in any way, no one "needed a physician's attention," no one was "battered into submission"--in short the whole story was an exaggeration which would be passed by as ludicrous...