Word: interviews
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...tumultuous French Chamber. The Vice-President never has to put on his hat to quell disturbances, nor does the Senate have to adjourn for an hour to quiet down. Debate goes on, and the eraser or blue pencil is used afterward. But might we suggest that the marshals interview Detective Sergeant Tighe...
...Institute of Politics, held at Williamsiown last summer, was a gathering of people to study and discuss problems of present day international politics," Professor Robert H. Lord '06 said in a recent interview for the CRIMSON. He is a co-author with Dean Haskins of the book entitled "Some Problems of the Peace Conference", and has made a study of conditions in Poland, spending several months there in 1920. At the Institute of Politics he conducted one of the Round Table Conferences...
...rare day now when one can pick up a paper without reading an interview or a speech in which there is a warning against college radicals. Only yesterday in addressing the graduating class at Columbia, President Butler animadverted upon the tendency among college men to revolt against authority or precedent. It is amusing for the most part, this fear, so frequently expressed, that the universities are becoming. Those who are of the college know how exaggerated the danger is; the student who cannot think of five real radicals out of the hundred or more men he know is not likely...
...rest, however, an examination would be given "by local alumni boards, especially sitting for the purpose, as to personality, leadership, and similar personal qualities." An applicant would secure a statement from his headmaster at school and be subject to an interview from the alumni board--all for the purpose of determining his personality. But just what this is or should be, just what type of person Princeton wants, must remain an uncertain thing. One sort might appeal to one board and not at all to another; or if a standard were hit upon, would not the applicants who passed...
...refusing to accept the League of Nations many years must be lost before the benefit to the rest of the world that would have been caused by our prompt entrance can be fully made up," said Hamilton Holt, editor of the "Independent' and prominent pro-League Republican, in an interview recently with a representative of the CRIMSON: The popularity that was ours during the war has also been lost; this however, will be regained whenever we decide to accept the covenant, but the moral to accept the covenant, but the moral prestige lost can never be fully recovered, for when...