Word: existent
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...collectivity commonly known as "Progressivism." Mr. Walling then showed that the minimum wage law and the recall if carried through would not produce a condition of Socialism. These reforms would prepare the road, but they are only a step. Political democracy which would be produced by them may still exist along with a privileged majority which is contrary to the socialistic theory...
...that Cambridge and the College are already overstocked with dramatic organizations, all of greater or less ambitiousness. A new club, composed of Fresh- men, attempting to produce plays, either original or of the sort usually attempted by the purely amateur company, would enter into a competition with the already existing organizations that they themselves find as stringent as need be. It is hardly likely that a new organization with a similar purpose could be very successful against the odds that exist...
...relation of the "47 Workshop" to the Dramatic Club should be made clear. Except that they are organizations that exist for dramatic purposes they are not at all alike. The "Workshop" does not aim to produce the finished play of the Dramatic Club, but, if possible, to "finish" the play for the Club. There should be three stages of play-making here: the "Workshop," the Dramatic Club, and the professional stage. Above all things the College dramatic organization should be co-operative, self-supporting, and self-sufficing, meeting all of its own needs such as staging, costuming, lighting, etc., through...
...second place, class buttons, as they now exist and whatever may be said to the contrary, remain a Senior prerogative. Harvard has few class customs; in fact, Senior gowns and buttons and the Junior Dance are the only ones that persist. If Sophomores feel that they must add to these customs, they should not make an addition that will be immediately offset by a subtraction...
Dean Briggs presided at the meeting of the Freshman class in the Union last evening, introducing as first speaker, Professor R. B. Merriman '96. Professor Merriman reminded the men of the great differences and conflicting personalities that must exist in a university as large and as cosmopolitan as Harvard and warned the 1917 men not to "shun or look askance at some one else because that someone else happens to be different from yourself and don't be deceived by momentary greatness for the race is a long one and those leading now may not be in sight...