Word: transcripts
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...among the great masses of the toilers of American. It would seem that when Mr. Gompers, as a leader and a lover of his country, comes before a body of college men to defend the principle of the closed shop, he should be more careful of his facts. Boston Transcript...
...Harvard Business School Club and the Alumni Association of the Business School, a large dinner will be given in the Living Room of the Union at 6.15 this evening. A. L. Ripley, president of the Merchants' National Bank of Boston, J. F. Williams '04, editor of the Boston Evening Transcript, and Dean W. B. Donham of the Business School will be the regular speakers of the evening, while R. M. Sanders 2G.B. will speak in behalf of the Business School Club. A. E. Brown, who won considerable fame as song and cheer leader at the Republican convention in Chicago last...
...being edited for their public. Let me give an example. The Lampoon has its ups and downs, but if I were asked to pick out examples of first-class undergraduate literary work at Harvard, I should include a good part of the Lampoon's former burlesque of the Transcript. The men who wrote that burlesque probably did not think they were doing anything of any particular literary significance; they simply wrote for the delectation of their classmates and friends, and then like the gentleman in Moliere's play who found he had been speaking prose all along, they found they...
...Boston Transcript sums up the matter in a single sentence: "The fetish of size, in education, is a fatal one." The purpose of a university is not alone to instruct and inspire the greatest number but also to make that instruction effective. The loss of the personal touch in education cannot be counterbalanced by the fact that a greater number of students are being taught...
...university with good traditions professors will be more ready to rely on the fairness and wisdom of a well-constituted board of trustees than on a board composed of "some of their own number, each affected almost unavoidably by a blas in favor of his particular subject." Boston Transcript...