Word: interwoven
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...Harvard Union was founded only four years ago, yet within a single College generation its activity has become so interwoven with the interests of the University that we wonder how former generations of Harvard men ever got on without a Harvard Union. During the past year, the Union has aimed to embrace and centralize practically every phase of College life...
...what the "dormitory situation" is; and as we have all spent some time at Cambridge and have a common foundation of data obtained from experience and personal contact, let us not befog the discussion with too much preliminary analysis of classes, clubs and athletics and other elements that are interwoven in the sum total of elements which go to make Harvard's world; and let us not introduce into this discussion any hasty argument on the qualifications which of course exist upon every general statement that may be made. If we are to be heroic, we must, first...
...girl toward a life which was too dazzling for her ignorance to resist, and the savage grief of her disappointed brother. "In the Thirsty Land" by Rowland Thomas takes its color from the South African war, but it is by no means a common place treatment. Simple pathos is interwoven with a powerful description of the mazes of a wounded man's wandering thoughts. A play, "Mr. Brent's Wife" by James Regnart, shows the rapid development and demolition of an improbable crisis which is characteristic of a light farce. H. L. Warner '03 contributes a well written critical essay...
...over-run by hangers-on, and whose boundless hospitality is shamefully abused. He is particularly beset by two so-called friends, who use his house as their own for selfish ends, the one to provide his daily food and lodgings, the other to secure a husband for his daughter. Interwoven with the main plot are the adventures of Marmaduke's god-son, Alfred Wemyss, who has got himself entangled in a love affair with the wife of a fiery Mexican, Don Guzman. The play is in three acts. The scenes, three in number, are laid in San Francisco...
...welfare of the railroads of this country is interwoven with the welfare of the nation itself. They are directly involved in every branch of our national life. It to by their means that time and space have sunk into comparative insignificance...