Word: broaden
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...production of this play in the Union is part of a more extensive plan to broaden the scope of the Union, and to make it more attractive to members. Negotiations have also been conducted with the Hasty Pudding Club and the Pi Eta Society, and these have made tentative promises to give one production of their annual plays in the Union this year. When these organizations have fully concluded arrangements as to the nature of their productions, the Union management will then be enabled to make definite announcements. It is not likely, however, that anything will happen to interfere with...
...last night. Mr. Steffens' talk was not so much a criticism of Socialism alone as of social and political theories in general. Socialism is characteristic of other social philosophies in being out-of-date and crystallized in thought. There is much need of radioalism in the party, to broaden it and to bring it in touch with the results of recent experience and research. There may be truth in the original teachings of Marx; there is also truth in the philosophy of the world-wide movement represented here by the I. W. W. The task is to combine and harmonize...
...responsibility owed to the theatre, and leagues have been organized in various cities for the advancement and the strengthening of the best in. fluences of the drama. On the other hand, the theatre can bring to the university man the great art of the drama and can broaden and educate him by its splendid democracy...
...where just such organizations as these have been carrying on their work. Undergraduates must necessarily see the College from the undergraduate viewpoint, without being able to get a clear perspective of Harvard in its entirety. Those men who are going to distant cities have a peculiarly favorable opportunity to broaden their own views of the real significance and place of the University by contact with those graduates who have proved themselves the most loyal to Harvard, while at the same time bringing before the graduates the views and problems of the undergraduates and evincing a keen interest in this graduate...
...explained in our editorial of October 13, the fact that undergraduates are expected to maintain in certain advanced work a standard beyond their knowledge, limits the usefulness of such courses by excluding men who are dependent upon high marks. The CRIMSON feels that it is possible to broaden the field of study by marking upon progress rather than attainment...