Word: contacter
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...confidently assert that there is no better way to get to know Harvard than through the CRIMSON. A candidate comes into contact with the heads of every activity and with prominent business men in Boston, and so the CRIMSON becomes a gateway to an infinite fund of information...
...editorial competition is one which requires practically none of that tedious clerical work which marks other college competitions with drudgery. In its demand for contact with the trend of events, it is as helpful and stimulating as any college course. It is certainly as valuable as a course in composition for the man who is inclined to carelessness in his writing. Then it gives the rare opportunity of self-expression. The training which a candidate receives is suited primarily to help him perfect his own style. Men who make the editorial board are eligible for the position of editorial chairman...
...candidate for this department finds himself in a position to meet many of the influential business and professional men in Cambridge and Boston. In doing the work required the candidates are also able to come into personal contact with the many large industries and corporations which advertise in the CRIMSON or have business relations with...
Some official recognition of this fact is necessary. A place must be made in the academic schedule for a survey of those fields in which the student finds a passing interest. An opportunity must be given him for contact with ideas which are utterly foreign to his field of concentration "Distribution" will not satisfy the need. It is arbitrary and incomplete. Nor can the need be met through selection of courses. In view of divisional examinations and his own scholastic standing a student can not spread his courses as he would like...
...Paris conference will make history because, through it, contact has at length been re-established with America. The representatives of the U. S. who attended it were there not as observers but as active participants. They had the same official standing and carried the same credentials as Mr. Churchill or M. Clementel...