Word: normalize
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That no tuition fee, in any department of the University, has been adequate to cover the per student cost of operation, even in the normal times preceding the war, as a fact arrived at from a long and exhaustive investigation just completed by the graduate committee in charge of the campaign now under way to raise for the University and endowment fund of fifteen million dollars...
...chosen in order to avoid confusing factors arising from war conditions, for even though tuition fees in the College and several graduate schools have since been raised, the tremendous increases in operating costs far offset this and the year 1914-15 is thus judged to be the best for normal analysis...
When the College opens on Monday there will be many undergraduates who will never have seen Harvard as it is in a normal fall term. For example, only the Senior Class will ever have attended a football game where there was organized cheering, for there have been no regular football games since that class entered its Sophomore year. There will also be certain important changes in the college itself. Athletics for Freshmen will be compulsory, according to the plan devised last spring by the Athletic Committee and approved by the Faculty and the Governing Boards in June. In addition, Harvard...
Frederick S. Mead '87, who is in charge of the University directory office and the University war records office has announced that the new directory will not include the geographical list as did the earlier editions. As the office receives in normal times more than 1,000 changes in its records in a single month, it is imperative that as little time as possible should elapse while the directory is on the press. The addition of the geographical list of University men would add to the time necessary for the preparation of the volume more than two months...
Completely the reverse has been the season for the Crimson nine. Last year's mediocre team supplied no experienced material, and even the 1921 nine could furnish formidable additions to the feeble pitching staff. After losing to colleges which in normal years would have boasted to secure a handful of hits from the "big red team," a change has taken place in the Crimson camp. Men whose ball playing had been scarcely of the "corner lot" variety for the first two months, came back in championship form. By winning the Princeton series and shutting out Boston College, Captain McLeod...