Word: seen
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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Some have seen fit to intimate that the CRIMSON, in presenting the details of the crew situation, has gone outside its proper field. Suffice it to say that the CRIMSON reported the necessary facts, gathered from the most reliable sources available, only after all other means of mending the crew policy seemed to be futile. If it is not the duty of the CRIMSON to give to undergraduates the details of a problem so vitally concerning them and Harvard, then the CRIMSON is not fulfilling what it believes to be the true function of a college newspaper...
...members of the University and the public. This exhibition, consisting of more than a hundred drawings from the great masters, gives a more intimate acquaintance with the artists than do the finished paintings of the public art galleries. These drawings are the personal and spontaneous expressions which can be seen very seldom. The exhibit, in this case, is made possible only through the generosity of a University graduate, Mr. J. P. Morgan '89. Only the esthetically prodigal will not turn from his beaten track to enjoy...
That the graduates are interested in the Flying Corps may be seen by the fact that in a letter to Mr. Curtis, P. W. Thomson '02, Secretary of the Harvard Club of Boston, writes that "several graduates have asked if there would be opportunity for them to serve in the Flying Corps. A very large number of men here in the Club would welcome any opportunity to serve in an organization like yours...
...concerning Harvard, ... "Though the knowledge of the Western section of the country among the undergraduates," says the writer, "is almost nil, I find the graduate students are mostly from the West and South." The dormitories and the Union strongly impress the Californian. "All of us," he says, "who have seen the Harvard Union and its large service to the University recognize that such an institution is badly needed at California." Just at this moment it is well to receive this suggestion of the impression Harvard without its Union would make upon the new-comer--Alumni Bulletin...
...wish to argue for a large audience for these last performances on the ground that such serious artistic work deserves recognition. Rather I wish to point out to those who have not seen it that they are cheating themselves if they miss this chance. W. A. NEILSON...