Word: groups
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Dates: during 1920-1920
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...Will it be the 31 pro-leaguers? Will it be Messrs. Borah, Johnson and the hard-headed anti-league Republicans with the green flag of Ireland in the van? Or will it be that politically-minded came lion, Senator Lodge? Can anyone imagine any combination of these three groups which would remain in the same room more than five minutes? Who then will lead? No one can say. Read Senator Harding's speeches and you will find him a shuttle-cock being bounced about from one group to another. Who will be advisor-in-chief? This one rule may justly...
...excellent work performed last summer by a small group of college men in France is clearly set forth in Mr. Buell's account of the Harvard Reconstruction Unit. Mr. Colby's crisp and entertaining essay on "Barbers and Barbarisms" reveals a practiced hand. What seems to the reviewer a sound presentation of Russian affairs is given by Mr. Holbrook although the facts in the opening paragraph might have been brought more closely up to date...
...Vanderlip will spend the morning at the Business School office in University Hall making arrangements to take charge of a group of lectures to be given to the second-year class during the second half year under the title of "The Beginner's Introduction to Business." At 1.30 in the New Lecture Hall he will deliver a lecture to the members of the Business School on the "Advantages and Disadvantages of Banking and Finance as a Vocation." This will be his first appearance in his new capacity as "Lecturer on Business Economics at the Graduate School of Business Administration...
...Eliot '53, LeBaron Russell Briggs '75, Frederick J. Stimson '76, Abbott Lawrence Lowell '77, Theodore Roosevelt '80, Curtis Guild '81, and Gardiner Lane '81. The society endeavors to gather together those men in each class who lead in scholastic attainments, and also by the example and activity of this group of scholars to raise the intellectual tone of the whole undergraduate body. The criterion of election is always the candidate's scholarship, the ascertainment of which has come to be undertaken in accordance with a definitely formulated elective system...
Last week, the CRIMSON published a letter written by two members of 1922. The letter voiced the sentiment of the other group of those who will not vote. This group feels that the class officers are a useless institution. Members of the group often do not know the men put up for office, take no interest in them and do not care to give honors to men who appear to do nothing while in office. I do not think that men are justified in taking this position. In my opinion, class officers are not a useless institution, but a very...