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...York. According to Mr. Francis R. Appleton '75, president of the Club, who gave the figures to a CRIMSON reporter yesterday, the Harvard Club of New York has 1488 men on its service record. 900 more men from the club were engaged in an auxiliary service of some sort. This is almost exactly a third of the total on the University's auxiliary service record...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: 1488 MEN OF N.Y. HARVARD CLUB IN ACTIVE SERVICE | 2/1/1919 | See Source »

...only the more hopeless reactionary element of the Bourbons and Tories who regard the President's peace proposals as a sort of half-way house to Bolshevism. Having more brains than the Bourbons and Tories, the real Bolsheviki have perceived from the outset that their real enemy was Wilsonism. That is why they unhesitatingly chose German autocracy as an ally and why they have resisted the President's program as bitterly as Junkertum itself...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: COMMENT | 2/1/1919 | See Source »

...groups increase their understanding of affairs of current discussion in the press, but they will derive benefit from the informal association with the Faculty leaders who otherwise may enter but vaguely into their lives. In addition, the part which each may take in open discussion will afford a valuable sort of training to the individual. In fact, the profit received will be so well worth the time spent, that each member of the University who can possibly do so should arrange to enter one of the groups as soon as they are formed...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: DISCUSSION GROUPS. | 1/25/1919 | See Source »

...only known!" If we had only known what fine things lay ahead how much better would have been our beginning. And yet how were we to tell? How were we to know when we started our beginners' Latin or Greek, studying the dullest sort of composition, of the glories of classic thought and poetry. This purposeless choice and following of our elementary courses can account for more wasted time than any one factor in our academic training...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: LOST OPPORTUNITIES | 1/18/1919 | See Source »

...several years Sabine was so much engrossed in teaching and in giving informal guidance to promising students, who came to him by a sort of inevitable attraction, that he found little time for further work of research. But the building of the Fogg Museum started him on a career of investigation and invention which has been unique...

Author: By Edwin H. Hall and Rumford PROFESSOR Of physics., S | Title: DEATH HASTENED BY DUTIES | 1/11/1919 | See Source »

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