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Dates: during 1910-1919
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Usage:

...While it is the undoubted duty of a University to grapple with every great question that may arise no matter what the consequences, it is even more the peculiar task and duty of a University to secure its deliberations in a complete impartial manner and to do nothing in word or speech which shall arouse fruitless passion or personal antagonisms. Whether or not this line has as yet been overstepped is a matter of individual opinion. It is a conclusion admitting of no diversity of opinion that with the foreign situation in its present critical position, with the continued neutrality...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: A REITERATION AND A WARNING | 10/13/1914 | See Source »

...word more! The Monthly is not endowed. It depends entirely on its own merits, and the merits of a good business manager. If you are a live wire, and want to try your hand at a real business proposition, then the Treasurer of the Monthly wants to see you, too. Come to the Sanctum, top floor of the Union, at 8 o'clock tonight...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Monthly Welcomes Candidates | 10/6/1914 | See Source »

...Word has been received from Professor W. A. Neilson of the English Department, who has been in Germany, that he is at present in Switzerland, on his way to take up his duties at the Sorbonne in Paris as Exchange Professor from Harvard...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Word From Professor Neilson | 10/2/1914 | See Source »

...five hard innings took the measure of the Cercle Francais on Soldiers Field yesterday afternoon to the tune of 14 to 13. The final score is more or less problematic because the last of the three umpires, about to announce the score, slipped on wet ground and broke his word. The knock-out drops of Francke and Pabst were too much for the Frenchmen who passed out repeatedly after three feeble whiffs at the pellet. The afternoon was voted a most successful one by all present...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Frenchies Lose to Teutons | 6/5/1914 | See Source »

...articles appealed most to me personally. One was on "Culture or Cramming," in which, under a rather sensational title, Mr. Larrabee gives a very broad-minded, sane, and--again I repeat the word--interesting exposition of his views on the present well-read-ness (or better, if I must coin a word anyhow) ill-read-ness of the average Harvard undergraduate...

Author: By D. KIMBALL ., | Title: ILLUSTRATED "INTERESTING" | 5/25/1914 | See Source »

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