The college conference meeting to be held this evening in Sever promises to be one of marked interest both in the topic for consideration and in the speaker who will open the discussion. Mr. Richard H. Dana, of New York, is to address the students on the subject of Reforms in Political Methods, and how to bring them about. The subject will of course be approached from a non-partisan point of view, and Mr. Dana's great familiarity with political affairs cannot fail to make the meeting both interesting and instructive. It may be well to add, for the sake of those who are spending their first year at Cambridge, that the college conference meetings are managed entirely by the students, and that the topics and speakers are chosen by and for them alone. They form, therefore, or ought to form, just as much a feature of our college life as athletic contests or club meetings.
Read more in Opinion
Notices.Recommended Articles
-
MERGER FORMS NON-PARTISAN FORUM GROUPA new undergraduate organization for political thought and discussion has been formed with the merger of the Political Science Forum
-
Cox Assails Growth of PACsThe increasing role of political action committee money in American politics "poses a serious threat to the whole political system,"
-
The Harvard Index.The Harvard Index for 1896-97, which is placed on sale today, is a somewhat smaller volume than was last year's,
-
Sound Money Campaign Club.Already nearly two hundred men have enrolled themselves as members of the Harvard Sound Money Campaign Club. Everyone who is
-
Harvard Good Government Club.Last spring a few men interested in politics met and formed an organization known as the Harvard Good Government Club.
-
The Harvard Non-Partisan Silver Club.Within the past few days there has been informally organized among the students of Harvard University a Harvard Non-partisan Silver