Word: subjects
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...been changed so that now instead of an annual prize of $150 for the best essay on political science, an annual prize of $100 for the best doctoral thesis on political science and a prize of $200 to be given on alternate years for an essay on the same subject will be awarded...
...little surprising to find, despite the professed purpose of the number, that the editorials concern themselves with everything of immediate interest except preparedness. This is all the more disappointing, because we are convinced that any of the editors of the Illustrated could have written more significantly on the subject than Mr. Hudson Maxim in a little morceau en prose entitled "The Moulting Eagle," appended in the number to a page photograph entitled "The Spirit of '76." We do not know whether this production is numbered among Mr. Maxim's literary works or whether it was dashed off for the occasion...
...Early Madrigals" will be the subject of the third Lowell Institute lecture given by Dr. A. T. Davison '06 on "The History of Choral Music" in Huntington Hall, Boylston street, Boston, this afternoon at 5 o'clock. The Radcliffe Choral Society and the Appleton Chapel Choir will assist...
...third of a series of articles by the Harvard Endowment Fund Committee throws additional light on the subject of salaries paid by the University and the cost of living, and shows that an endowment fund is sorely needed to meet the increased price of necessities and to maintain the high standard of instruction in the University. The most important effect of the continued deficits in the expenditures of the University has been a reduction of the unrestricted capital funds, and the resulting policy of retrenchment by the Corporation, which has prevented the University from granting the teaching force increased salaries...
...decision won yesterday evening in the triangular debate by the home team may be a tribute to the logical powers of the University's debaters, or a tribute to the logical truth of their subject. The world is turning upside down nowadays, and our most cherished foreign policies are going awry. The Monroe Doctrine, the open door, even the revered Constitution are receiving the buffets of a pugnacious age. Our "splendid isolation" may fail when, at the end of this war, governments are remade...