Word: recommendations
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...Crimson eleven. For the benefit of the agitators may we suggest for a mascot such dainty, playful animals as a gazelle an entellus, or a quagga. Or, to compromise, we suggest that a peacock be used to symbolize "fair Harvard." Falling in all of these proposals we recommend that Harvard lend an ear to those who would suggest a teahound. Cornell Daily...
...departed. I dried my hands on my handkerchief and arrived late for my next class. Since that time, when feeling particularly optimistic. I have tried these gorgeous white elephants, but always with the same result. My handkerchief is somewhat small for a towel and I should like to recommend that these machines be turned over in Margery wherewith in frighten visitors to her seances, and some plebeian towels be substituted in their stead. Gurdon S. Howe...
...never recommend a man to go into Egyptian archaeology unless he has first, a university education behind him with a good scholarship record, and second, a private income sufficient for a modest living. In the Egyptian field the training requires a great deal of time and a man's material progress is slow. A man has to make his own place by developing some special branch of research in which he excels every one else. The number of expeditions is small and the places...
...endowment insurance plan that we have recommended to the class of 1925 is not an experiment," said the Senior committee in a statement to the CRIMSON yesterday. "It must be clearly understood that it has been thoroughly tested and has proved satisfactory in every way. Princeton has used a similar plan very successfully and last year's class at M. I. T. has found entirely satisfactory a plan practically identical in every respect to the one we recommend. Last year's class at the University adopted an endowment insurance with much the same arrangements as we have, and they have...
Dean W. L. Sperry of the Harvard Theological School, when interviewed, by a CRIMSON reporter on the subject of the proposed course, stated that he would favor such a course only on the condition that it be restricted to a historical treatment of the subject. "I would not recommend a general course in religion, added Dean Sperry. "If it proposed in any way to touch upon the philosophy were brought on the instructor would be in danger of getting into controversial fields which might easily lead to some misunderstanding...