Word: transcript
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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Enrolment in the colleges today is the largest in the nation's history, as disclosed by figures collected by the Boston Transcript from the returns of more than 60 institutions representing every type of higher education in every part of the country. It is larger by 42 per cent than in 1918 and larger by 21 per cent than in 1916, the record-breaking year of pre-war prosperity. So immense and insistent has been the flow of men, that for many colleges the old-time problem of how to attract more students has given way to the problem...
...Shubert, Beach 4520 Symphony Hall, Back Bay 1492 Tremont, Beach 608 Wilbur, Beach 4520 Boston Papers. Associated Press, Fort Hill 400 Boston Daily Advertiser, Beach 7520 Boston American, Main 5180 Boston Globe, Main 5721 Boston Herald, Beach 3000 Boston Post, Main 1004 and 7400 Boston Record, Main 2470 Boston Transcript, Main 6950 Boston Traveler, Beach 3000 Christian Science Monitor, Back Bay 4330 CAMBRIDGE. General. Co-operative Society, Camb. 6580 Co-operative Branch, Camb. 141 Crimson Printing Co., Camb. 3390 Electric Light Co., Camb. 1170 Fire Department, Camb. 363 Police Department, Camb. 423 Chief Inspector, Camb. 1980 Kneeland, J. E., Camb...
...most interesting gift in the form of a scrap-book has recently been received by Widener Library from Charles C. Read '64. In this volume he kept a record of his undergraduate days by clippings from the Boston Evening Transcript, programs, official notices, invitations and other mementos. Many crew regatta programs are pasted throughout the scrap-book. One is of particular interest as it tells of the race in which crimson was first taken as the Harvard color. In another place a long clipping from the Transcript tells of the visit to this country of "Albert of Belgium," now King...
...rather surprised to find that it meant nothing more than "committee," and I wondered why it had never been applied to our Congressional manner of doing business. Another translation of the word, making it mean "conference," made me wonder why, since they use the word so freely, the Boston "Transcript" and the New York "Times" do not speak of our present Industrial Soviet at Washington. Perhaps the word is reserved for those conferences or councils which are un-American. But would we call the Industrial Conference un-American? or an importation from Russia? Why have all the opposition papers been...
Ostensibly the Transcript is asking for information. As regards his work at Harvard, a glance at the Elective Pamphlet shows two undergraduate courses given by Mr. Laski--Political Theory and English History Since 1688, and two research courses in Recent Political Ideas. None of these concern themselves with American government, and treats the Soviet principle only as a part of the general history of political ideas. We do not agree with Mr. Laski's remarks before the Policemen's Union, nor do we believe his presence there good taste. But we feel equally that any attack on the right...