Word: treatment
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...details and workings of the system of co-operation arranged for the Institute and the University any added interpretation by the framers is of paramount interest. The version given by President Lowell before the New York Harvard Club last night throws added light on one important point. The treatment of the graduate student under the plan is of superlative importance believing as we do in the principle at the base of the Graduate School of Applied Science. We should be sorry to see that principle lost in the resulting combination. Yet it is well nigh impossible to provide for this...
...action elaborate and yet the ultimate success of the work depends on the sincere intelligent co-operation of the administrative officers. No amount of detailed specification can avail as much as the spirit of co-operation. High ideals inspired the proceedings from the first; with these obtaining, proper treatment of graduate school and other problems can be confidently expected...
...coming spring production. Competitors are reminded that the last day to hand in manuscripts is February 10. This contest is mainly for one-act plays, since it has been the custom of the club in the past to present three short pieces in the spring. A wide range of treatment and subject is aimed at and authors who have short plays that are in any way unusual are urged to submit them. Really good one-act plays are acceptable and any of unusual merit will be given the best possible production by the Dramatic Club. Longer plays are also solicited...
...Illustrated states a forceful case against your "paternalistic Group System and Faculty advisers" to which many Harvard men will demand an answer. The reviewer heard Mr. Burton Kline '06 when he spoke on Harvard and the press and knows from experience that his statement of Harvard's professorial ill-treatment of reporters is as true as it is interesting. R. L. West '14 has given us a good deal of inside information on the training of debating teams to what he calls the "Harvard Habit of Winning Debates." But he has uncovered what we might name the Institute's family...
This year work has been carried on quietly by a number of men interested, with the idea that if once fair treatment for the newspapers were secured, the newspapers would reciprocate. There is no doubt that they have had cause for complaint. At times they have been treated by the University or its members with that condescension which railroads were wont to assume toward the public not long ago; and they have turned to it for satisfaction by means of exaggerated stories. These are the days when publicity is the acknowledged course for railroads and big business; they are also...