Word: reviews
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...announced yesterday afternoon by the board of the Harvard Law Review, their fall elections show fourteen new men chosen, five being Harvard men. The elections are as follows: Albert Moses Cristy 3L., of Providence, R. I., Brown University 1909; George Knowles Gardner 3L., of Worcester, Harvard 1912; Harold Funk Goodrich 3L., of Anoka, Minn., Carleton College 1911; Herman Ellis Riddell, of Atlanta, Ga., University of Georgia 1911; and Sherman Woodward 3L., of Cambridge, Harvard 1911. From the second year class: Montgomery Boynton Angell, of Rochester, N. Y., Princeton 1911; Julius Huseman Amberg, of Grand Rapids, Mich., Colgate University 1912; Chauncey...
...about a year ago that the CRIMSON published an editorial on Harvard men in the Law School, deploring the fact that not one Harvard man was elected to the Law Review and that in a single year Harvard's representation on the paper had fallen 46 per cent. The editorial concluded with these words: "There appears to be no escape from the conclusion that the recent Review elections indicate a real deterioration in the quaity of work done by Harvard graduates in the Law School. Such a deterioration presents a problem which all Harvard men are called upon to face...
...other speakers, A. Beane '11, L. Withington '11, C. B. Ruggs 3L., and B. Wright 3L., discussed respectively the openings for settlement work, the value of the Union to law students, the opportunities for helpful experience in the Harvard Legal Aid Bureau, and the aims of the Law Review...
...Harvard Musical Review announces the election of R. D. Skinner '15, of New York City, and of R. H. Sessions '16, of Northampton, as regular editors; and of C. F. Damon '15, of Honolulu, Hawail and P. B. Roberts '14, of Malden, as business editors...
...would, if it could be put into effect, be of great value. Since Physiology 1 has been put beyond the reach of many students, perhaps some of its more general phases might be incorporated in Zoology 2. As it was, the new course spent several weeks' reading on a review of Biology, which might give an opportunity for the addition of some Physiology. Of course, such a change would depart somewhat from the concrete subject of the course, but, on the other hand, Hygiene and Preventive Medicine deal intimately with Eugenics. We make this suggestion...