Word: appealed
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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Senator Lodge is condemned for making a patriotic appeal at the end of his speech. A patriotic appeal it certainly was; Lodge told us plainly that it was time we gave our thoughts and our efforts to our own country. England is doing it, Italy is doing it, France is doing it. And right here may be found the essential difference between the contentions of President Lowell and Senator Lodge. The President argued that the most fundamentally important business before us is to see that some covenant that has international welfare as its aim be established. The Senator contends that...
...enabled Brooks House to carry on its good work in a most difficult period; and to my own associates of the Executive Cabinet for their faithful co-operation and interest in the year's success. In commenting upon the situation, I can make but one suggestion and repeat the appeal that is almost annually made for wider and more active interest in the work of the Association among the whole undergraduate body, for on this alone depends the success or failure of our good work. J. G. COOLIDGE...
...members of the University who attended one or more of the Harvard R. O. T. C. Camps during the period of war, the loan exhibition which opens tomorrow afternoon at the Fogg Art Museum will have a double appeal. In the first place the exhibition itself, comprised of valuable loans from many of the largest American art collections, has been carefully and tastefully selected to represent the whole history and scope of modern French art. Secondly the collection has been brought together in commemoration of the devoted services of those seven French officers who, assigned here as instructors, taught...
...been so bad. In the days when Professors Francke and Munsterburg sought to justify the German Imperial Government, no one prevented them from saying what they pleased. At the first hint from anywhere that "They should be shut up," the CRIMSON or the Illustrated would reply with a passionate appeal for free speech. They were not "shut up" and the University's mind remained unpoisoned...
Tonight the Freshman smoker in the Union offers the first opportunity for the entire class to gather under one roof and in the name of good fellowship to overcome an obstacle in the path of future success. The committee has provided all manner of entertainment calculated to appeal to the masculine heart but the value of the evening depends solely on every man in the class contributing his presence. The Fates have done their best to keep the class apart. Here is a chance for the Freshmen to put one over on the Fates, May they make the most...