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...entering wedge for a system of universal and obligatory military training for universal and obligatory military service--that is for service, in time of war, by each man in whatever capacity the country needs him. In this nation, just as in every other nation that endures, there exist obligations of citizenship as well as privileges. The obligation to render military service to the country rests upon all citizens, share and share alike, each according to the best of his ability. The camps provide the machinery for the operation of a system of universal military training under exclusive federal control...
...what basis, then, does the right exist? On the fact that in the first one hundred and forty-four years of its existence the College did grant degrees and the Massachusetts Constitution of 1780 sanctified this power by providing 'that the President and Follows in their corporate capacity, and their successors in that capacity, their officers and servants, shall have, hold, use, exercise and enjoy, all the powers, authorities, rights, liberties, privileges, immunities and franchises which they now have, hold, use, exercise and enjoy.' That is the basis of our degree-granting power--a privilege exercised in colonial days without...
...School to bring about a close co-operation between the corps of instructors on the one hand and the business community on the other. It is here that the School of Business will find an unexampled opportunity and perform an unexampled service. Just as the finest medical schools can exist only where there are the greatest hospitals, that is, in the large centres of population, so that the most successful schools of business in the future may be expected to be found in the great centres of business life...
Finding it impossible to believe that such a casual attitude could exist concerning one of the major sports at Harvard, I made it a point to raise the subject among other men during the day. My astonishment increased when I found that similar opinions are held by others, whose loyalty and pride for the University I had never before questioned...
...plays submitted, fifty per cent. were written by students at Radcliffe, and not half the manuscripts handed in from the University were the work of undergraduates. This situation is more significant following on the award of the Craig Prize to a Radcliffe student. If budding dramatists do not exist in the College nothing can be said; but assuming there are men of latent writing ability, it is blindness for them not to take part. Such contests offer a sort of laboratory work in practical play-writing, and should be made vital and successful, as well as enjoyable, part...