Word: student
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Like its prototype, the new school will be open only to graduates. In fact, the standard will be so high that students will have to have studied four years in graduate schools before they will be eligible. "But," Professor Doriot points out, "that is not as difficult as it may seem, since in France the requirements for a B.A. are slightly below those in our best colleges, and incidentally much more standardized. A student is generally elig ible for his degree when about eighteen...
...case of upperclassmen in good standing, cuts taken from the last class before and the first class after a one-day holiday will not necessarily result in probation. Such cuts will, however, be especially noted on the student's record and if, at any future time during that year, such a man's record becomes unsatisfactory in any particular, the fact that he has taken holiday cuts will weigh heavily against him. The last class before and the first class after both the Christmas and April recess periods must be attended. If a cut is taken from such a class...
...whose prowess the Crimson football destinies now depend, 36 went to private prep schools, eight to high schools, and one is a transfer student from another university. Milton leads the van with a total of eleven representatives, Exeter is second with seven, Groton third with three, while Andover and Worcester Academy each supplies two. Taft, St. Paul's, St. Mark's Noble and Greenough, Loomis, Berkshire, Chestnut Hill Academy, New Prop, Roxbury, St. George's and Middlesex have one apiece...
Introduced four years ago as a new step in undergraduate journalism, "The Student Vagabond" has become a regular daily feature of the CRIMSON. Since its original inception the idea of Vagabonding courses has been followed not only in Harvard, but in numerous other universities where students wished to attend an occasional lecture in a course in which they were not enrolled...
Almost every course in the University is open to any student to listen in whenever he may wish. Each day the Vagabond announces a selection of lectures which seem of general interest. The Vagabond endeavors to make the range of his recommendations wide, and to include representative lectures in the fields of Science, Literature, Philosophy, Music, History, and Fine Arts. In general, the Vagabond suggests those lectures which, without requiring special knowledge of the subject matter, promise to be of value and interest to the casual listener...