Word: bulletinned
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...Union, or who served in its defense during the Rebellion of 1861," the deed of gift included the stipulation that "no picture, bust, tablet, monument, or memorial shall be allowed within said Hall inconsistent with its intent." So it was until Edgar H. Wells, editor of The Harvard Alumni Bulletin, raised the issue in an editorial in the Bulletin in 1909, in which he argued that "The Harvard men...whether they fought under the stars and stripes or under the stars and bars were first, last, and always Harvard men." There then ensued a lively debate in which were joined...
...centennial of the beginning of the Civil War, that Professor Mason Hammond '25, then Pope Professor of the Latin Language and Literature, asked in a letter in The Alumni Bulletin if the "time had come" to consider a memorial to the southern dead as an act of reconciliation. I joined this cause in 1976, on the nation's bicentennial, raised it again as art issue at the time of the University's 350th anniversary celebrations in 1986, and have written and preached on the topic ever since. To my knowledge the initiative in all of these discussions has always been...
...spent much of 1995 fighting what appears to be a losing battle against a U.S. bill that would criminalize "indecent" computer messages. The new restriction confirmed the net's worst fears about what may lie ahead: Germany's little list included sexuality support groups for the handicapped and a bulletin board for homosexuals that has served as a lifeline for thousands of gay youth...
...service as well as universities and businesses would be require to monitor the information passing over their lines and stored on their computers, and would be responsible if anything "indecent" found its way into the hands of a minor. (To continue the previous analogy, the man whose store the bulletin board hangs in would also face legal trouble.) The responsibility of content-monitoring is an unreasonable burden to place upon network providers whose systems handle a vast flow of information...
Although the Yard Bulletin asserts that "the Union is not a Stop and Shop," as evidenced by the actions of three first-year students, the Freshman Union is apparently a furniture store...