Word: similarities
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...position of managing-editor will commence next fall and will be open to Sophomores. The competition for advertising manager, which is a remunerative office, will begin tomorrow, and will be open to Freshmen. This will afford an excellent business training and will especially benefit men who have a similar line of work in view after college. All Freshmen who are interested in this work should report to F. P. Magoun, Jr., '16, 60 Mt. Auburn street tomorrow evening at 7 o'clock. No previous experience is necessary...
...spring class crew races on Wednesday, May 6. On that afternoon crews picked from the Sophomore, Junior and Senior classes will race over a 1 and 7-8 mile course on the Basin. The crew winning this race will row against a class crew from Yale chosen in a similar manner, on Saturday, May 16. All of the men who row on the winning crew will be allowed to wear their class numerals. To date the make-up of the crews has been shifted almost daily, no regular order having been yet decided upon. The fourth Freshman crew has been...
...half-year he will devote his time to field work at the Bussey Institute. In this way, with the two divisions of the course clearly separated and thoroughly treated, greater efficiency in the whole subject will be achieved and the school will maintain a position far in advance of similar institutions...
...chorus of 150 singers, composed of members of the Harvard Glee Club and the Radcliffe Choral Society, will give a concert of classical music in Sanders Theatre, Cambridge, on Thursday, evening, May 14. A similar concert, the first in which the Harvard and Radcliffe organizations were united, was given last year, and proved to be of high artistic merit. This year, the chorus has been much augmented, and its preparation has been even more careful. Inasmuch as a large proportion of the numbers will be sung without accompaniment, it is evident that the chorus has set for itself a high...
...Fitch outlined the groups as the complacent provincialists, the conscientious provincialists, and the bitter provincialists. The first are the private school men, who draw together naturally and unconsciously by reason of their similar training and vast interests in common; the second are the public school men, sprung from the so-called "middle classes," who hold off from the first group partly from disapproval and partly from disapproval and partly from inability to break social barriers; and the third, a group far greater than is generally realized, consists of those who have, by dint of extraordinary grit and determination, worked their...