Word: thoughts
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...Nations Society in conjunction with the University Diplomatic Club to get the President to speak at the University. No official action, however, has been taken by the University authorities. Mr. Hunnewell '02, Comptroller of the University and Secretary to the Corporation said yesterday he knew of no invitation and thought it extremely improbable that any action would be taken...
...Athletic Boards of Harvard, Yale and Princeton. These meetings have been entirely informal; none of the decisions there reached can be valid without ratification by the Athletic Committees of the three universities concerned. No radical changes in athletic policies or relations have been contemplated. There has been no thought of any "Big Three League," or of drawing out of athletic relations with other colleges or universities; an inspection of the published athletic schedules of Harvard, Yale and Princeton will show this. The general topics that have been talked over have been temporary changes in the eligibility rules, made necessary...
...open meeting, to be sure, and the interruption may or may not have been called for; the circumstances of the meeting and the nature of the subject, however, might have suggested at least a pacific refusal and an explanation of the situation. Instead the police thought it necessary to protect the disturber from the hostility of the crowd...
President Wilson may speak at the University next Monday, if the efforts being made toward that end by the League of Nations society meet with success. The secretary of the society, E. B. Schwulst '19, said last evening that he thought the chances were good that the President will accept the invitation extended to him through Secretary Tumulty...
...heartily indorse any organization which will further the serious thought and expression of college undergraduates," said Ex-President Taft in an interview with a CRIMSON reporter. "When I was at Yale we had debating and discussion organizations in which the most prominent men took an interest and which had a great deal to do with the development of some that later went into public life. Practice in forming and expressing opinions is of the highest importance to college men; I have nothing but approval for an organized system of discussion groups...