Word: bulletin
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...Bulletin No. 1 is now ready for delivery. Copies can be secured at Headquarters, Weld...
...says, "who have seen the Harvard Union and its large service to the University recognize that such an institution is badly needed at California." Just at this moment it is well to receive this suggestion of the impression Harvard without its Union would make upon the new-comer--Alumni Bulletin...
...latest issue, the Alumni Bulletin suggests that Harvard undergraduates are being deprived of an opportunity when they miss hearing a lecture by Mr. John Masefield. This statement is undoubtedly not an exaggeration. Mr. Masefield stands in the first rank among present-day poets, and has also a reputation as a playwright. Some of the works by which he has won wide recognition ares "Salt Water Ballads," "A Tarpaulin Muster," "Captain Margaret," "The Street of Today," and "The Daffodil Fields." Among his plays which have been produced are: "The Campden Wonder," "Man," and "Pompey the Great." At Yale, at the University...
...October 11. 1824, and was therefore, in his 92nd year. He was in Cambridge in June, 1914, to celebrate the 70th anniversary of his graduation from college. He was an active member of the Harvard Club of Chicago, and often wrote for the Harvard Graduates' Magazine and the Alumni Bulletin reminiscences of his college days...
...favorite occupation of socialists and other "radicals" to rain abuse upon the college student for his conservatism. The Alumni Bulletin quotes, for example, the following from a recent book by John Macy '99: "Nothing could be more solidly conservative than American undergraduate youth. Many Russian students are rebels. But American universities can be trusted not to bring forth a revolutionary brat--their twilight sleep is perpetual." The Bulletin disagrees, and gives some instances to prove that there is no "lack either of professors and students with thoughts of their own, or of avenues for their self-expression...