Word: stand
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...articles to be published in the CRIMSON describing four of the plans which have been suggested as memorials for the men of the University who have died in the war. The four proposals for a memorial which are to receive consideration are: a gymnasium; an auditorium; a monument, to stand on the farther bank of the Charles River; and the inscription of the names of the University men who have lost their lives in the war in the rooms which they occupied while at College. The first of these plans is the subject of this article, and the other three...
...Navy is given the names of 12 in the line service and 7 in the aviation. The Marine Corps has six men on the Roll, one being an aviator. Among the auxiliary branches, the various Ambulances stand highest with a total of 12 deaths, the Red Cross has three, the Y. M. C. A. 2, and one is noted in the Belgian Relief Commission...
With the announcement today of the final plans for a unit of the Reserve Officers' Training Corps, at Harvard it is more than ever evident that the A. B. which many graduates of the university will receive in years to come will stand not only for the Bachelor of Arts of tradition, but for Bachelor of Artillery. Military training, as it is to be re-established next fall, will be a distinct university department. Men will major in the course as they now major in history or chemistry. They will study military science and subjects allied to it in each...
...Young Democracy" (Perhaps the name should be "Young Bolshevism"), a new radical sheet published in New York, has revived the whole wretched business of the hazing of our Freshman Bolshevik under the caption "Hitting Heresy at Harvard." The article tells the story of the hazing, the stand of the Harvard Liberal Club, and quotes the CRIMSON's editorial which said "Freedom of conscience is one of the principles for which Harvard has always stood." So far these youthful gentlemen have no fault to find. They continue by stating the steps that the University has taken to safeguard free speech...
...Mollusc" is a light comedy, with a weak, sentimental ending, but has the virtue of illustrating the all too prevalent type of character who struggles to stand still. In order to bring out this point, both the plot and the acting are a good deal over done. George Arliss himself seems just a bit unnatural, and his conversations with Philip Merrivalle, the weather beaten and long suffering husband of the "Mollusc", holds the attention but seems to lack essential characteristics of reality...