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There are at present some fifteen clubs at Harvard formed to unite men from various sections of the country. The purpose of these clubs is on the whole social; they bring together for an evening meeting or, in the case of the larger clubs, for meals and social purposes, a number of men who have like home interests. In so far as they give pleasure to their members, the clubs justify their existence; but they might, through establishing closer relations with their home Harvard clubs, be of much greater influence in helping to make a more unified Harvard spirit throughout...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: HARVARD CLUBS AND UNDERGRADUATE ASSOCIATIONS. | 6/7/1911 | See Source »

...party will get off a rough line when it finally disembarks onto dear old Peddock's. Trunks to cover the larger limbs can be purchased for a song from the ship's Steward. Bemis was the model, and all are assured of a perfect fit when they try on their pairs of Essentials...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: PRIVILEGED LEISURE CLASS | 6/1/1911 | See Source »

...service to the undergraduates? All the branches of the subject are with reference to such service. Writers for the prizes are invited to consider whether the present cost of education might well be lowered, whether inexpensive education would widen the usefulness of Harvard, and whether the introduction of a larger number of intellectual students, of the old fashioned kind, would help to the end in view? It is understood that one of Harvard's larger leaders gave New Lecture Hall to the University, and the query is whether the Lecture Hall could be of great service to the University...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: NEW SYSTEM FOR HARVARD? | 5/22/1911 | See Source »

...George Herbert McCaffrey '12, of Roxbury, for an essay an "The Police Administration of Boston." Competition for this prize is open to undergraduate students in any college or university of the United States, and there are usually competitors from a score or more of institutions, including all the larger universities. This is the fourth consecutive year in which the prize has been won by a Harvard student...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Baldwin Prize to Harvard Man | 5/18/1911 | See Source »

...rapid march of events so characteristic of the American college community it is remarkably easy for the great majority of students to lose track of the larger tendencies of a given period. To determine the proper perspective of concurrent incidents is practically impossible in the turmoil of present affairs. And for this reason the real importance of less evident facts is often unappreciated. Such a situation the CRIMSON believes exists in connection with the administration which has governed the University since the election of President Lowell in 1909. In short, many of us appreciate neither the number nor the importance...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE PRESENT ADMINISTRATION. | 4/14/1911 | See Source »

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