Word: leaded 
              
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 Dates: during 1910-1919 
         
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...Fitch '00 will deliver the opening address this year. Rev. H. S. Coffin, of the Board of Preachers, J. R. Mott, and R. E. Speer will be among the other speakers. Rev. P. M. Rhinelander '91 and Professor H. B. Wright, of Yale, will lead the Bible study groups, while Roswell Bates, of New York, will represent the social service work...
...strictly forbidden; and it is a matter of college loyalty to live up to the rule. Of non-academic activities there are but two--athletics and conversation. They are not a function but a recreation; nor are they limited to specialists whose reputation is professed. Young Oxonians, in general, lead a serene and undistracted, but rich and wholesome life. They cultivate athletics because each is an active devotee of some form of sport. And conversation--in junior commons, in the informal clubs, in study or in tutor's room--it is an education, a passion...
...college. At Harvard there are a few great ideals which unity the teachers, students, and graduates. These ideals are a love of freedom, which, as Emerson said, could be taken from men no more than the sun can be taken from the sky; and a desire to lead an honorable career by service to fellow men and country. The unity of ideals in college is great, and the diversity in characters always has been and always will be great...
...lecture" is more or less a matter of opinion. The CRIMSON'S opinion on this point differs radically from that expressed in the Advocate editorial. In few churches are poor sermons so rare and exceptional sermons so frequent as in Appleton Chapel. A reading of the Advocate editorial would lead one to believe that seldom are distinguished preachers brought to the Chapel. A glance at the list of men who have preached this year will show that there have been but few Sundays when the pulpit was not occupied by a man of national reputation...
...Three Moods of the Marsh" are vague and vapid. (Alliteration is always effective in muck-raking; the fitness of the words is less important). The critic may further observe that the verse is extremely conventional and not always grammatical; and that Kentish sailors must have queer occupations that lead them monthly to the Severn and the Trent. But the real opportunity for sensational exposure lies in the notices of plays at the Boston theatres: a feature that has clearly been instituted with a view to obtaining free tickets for the editors. Graft...