Word: columnism
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Naturally enough, such organizations as the Harvard Union for American Neutrality have been treated with scant respect. Their puerile arguments have been heard and scoffed at; their views have been aired in the communication column of the CRIMSON; they have done all in their power to aid the pacifist lobby in Congress, and their efforts have justly resulted in pitiful and ignominious failure...
...unmistakable to the undergraduate. Words with such deep military significance as "Crimson," "grades" and "deturs" will, of course, have to be omitted. Announcements in the courses on perspective, gas analysis, theory of design, class Martial, the canon (and fugue) and Bacon will no longer appear in the notice column. A mere glance at the Faculty will show how impossible it will be for many members to have their names in the front-page write-ups. Professors Baker, Post, Chase, Ropes, Lake, Graves, and Ford, for example, will have to be satisfied with temporary obscurity. What if the commissary officer should...
...another column of the CRIMSON appears a communication from the chairman of the Graduate Track Committee. This committee, reorganized last spring, besides the chairman consists of C. C. Little '10, H. Jaques '11, W. A. Barron '14, R. C. Floyd '11, J. Greenough '15, E. A. Teschner '17, Theodore Clark '17 and Coach Donovan, ex-officio. It was organized to afford a means of graduate supervision of track athletics. It meets regularly weekly or bi-weekly from September until June. At its meetings the performance of individual runners is discussed and ways and means put into effect for bettering...
...today's communication column appears a detailed and lively outburst against the vacillating and Prussian policy of the CRIMSON. Some of our more gullible readers may readily infer from this article that the CRIMSON is an instrument of the Nation's great munition concerns who are supposed to desire the most terrible of wars. It may be the case that one or two of the writer's accusations can be regarded seriously. He complains that we have declared war already by taking the Harvard Union for American Neutrality to task. War has not been declared against Germany, but against...
...Peace Union deplores injudicious and hasty action. Someone else recently in this column also seemed to think that a maddening war-fever was sweeping over the United States. Don't these people realize that perhaps never before was a big nation so calmly considering war as we are at present...