Word: scheme
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...remedy for this, and as a possible stimulus to debating in the entire University, the CRIMSON would suggest a series of inter-department debates. Under this scheme, members of all the graduate schools would have the opportunity to meet the men of the College and could also debate among themselves. The selection of subjects might be so arranged as not to give the members of any one team an undue advantage by assigning a subject, the study of which falls within its own department. We feel that this system would arouse a spirit of rivalry among the departments and would...
...obvious that a comparative few can pay $7.50 a week in order to board there. Is it not better that all Freshmen should eat at Memorial where they come in contact with one another and other members of the University three times a day? The great force of this scheme in promoting class unity and college democracy can only be surpassed by the future Freshman dormitories...
...test their value. It will be watched by other colleges, and if it appears possible to carry on a course consisting of a series of lectures by prominent men on topics so unrelated and still make it of such nature as may properly be counted toward a degree, the scheme will undoubtedly be widely copied. The "Outlook" has a word of commendation...
...would be done away with. An alliance on a broad basis of mutual helpfulness, with the application of this cooperation limited at first to graduate students, is the recommendation put forth by President Maclaurin. The suggested relationship is in no sense a merger. In fact, the success of the scheme may be said to depend on the continued separation of the two schools whose characters are necessarily so different. On the one hand stands Harvard--the University with its atmosphere of Liberal Art. On the other is Technology--with its ideals of specialized technical efficiency. Each is in a position...
This plan of canvassing the graduating class was adopted last spring on a smaller scale in connection with a scheme to establish social service committees in New York, Chicago, Philadelphia, Boston and other large cities throughout the country, with the purpose of indicating to college graduates opportunities for philanthropic work. The aim of the project which is being adopted this year was outlined by O. F. Cutts L. 03 in an address in the Union last spring in which he spoke of the value of changing the generally favorable attitude of college men towards social service into one of active...