Word: students
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...have been refused the right to hold meetings in University rooms, on a multiplicity of pretexts, but other organizations against whom the same objections might have been raised, have done so. The Student Employment Bureau refused to give us men to sell the Progressive, because the Progressive was exposing new Sacco-Vanzetti evidence. Now we are refused the right to distribute "flyers" inside the Yard Gates, although other organizations have several times used the Yard, and CRIMSON subscription agents are given the freedom of the dormitorities. To our complaints, we are answered that for each individual case a specific decision...
Every year the Dramatic Club presents two plays, and as yet it has never presented one written by an undergraduate of Harvard College. Although there are now two or three plays under consideration for the annual fall production, there is still a good deal of time for student authors to submit original manuscripts to the Club. E. T. Batchelder '30, Treasurer of the Club, will be glad to read over any contributions of would-be playwrights at Holworthy 13. This is an excellent opportunity for all concerned, as the presentation of a play written by a Harvard undergraduate will...
...present a Fellow of Merton College, Oxford, having spent his student days at Balliol, and a period as tutor at Corpus Christi. He is a Fellow of the Royal Society, and since 1918 he has been Commander of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire...
...follows: "The Graduate School of Education hopes that the daily teas, which were so pleasant a part of the life of the School last year, will be continued this year. To this end the School plans to inaugurate the teas at once and to carry them on until the Student Associations are organized...
...snail. Education has been made as painless as possible. If, in easing entrance requirements so as to admit the vast numbers who are now candidates for degrees in America, the college authorities have sacrificed scholarship, they have added to the adolescent's joy in life. Addressing the students of Columbia at the formal opening of its one hundred and seventy-sixth year, Dr. Butler reminded them of the gruelling entrance tests of fifty years ago. He was frank enough to say that not only could no member of the present student body meet those tests, but that no member...