Word: knowes
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...taken forty years of unceasing fighting, of patient waiting, of striving to mould public opinion, without which we cannot get anywhere, or, if we do, find ourselves stuck, side-tracked and helpless before we know it. It is going to take us twenty years more to get where we cannot slide back. Every winter the forces of selfish greed that care nothing for the neighbor, nothing for the state, and in their utter short-sightedness and folly cannot grasp the meaning of the President's constant warning that "we go up or down together," can see only their own immediate...
...there were four thousand invitations sent to the students alone, it was thought that perhaps another year, only the new men, who might not know about these Teas, need by invited by note. All the students, who are here this winter, would understand the cordial invitation, which is always printed in the CRIMSON every week; so that only the new-comers would need a note. About this proposal for next year--it is only a proposal--there seems to have been a slight misunderstanding. The Committee wish it distinctly understood, that every student in the University will always be welcome...
...clock Mr. E. B. Drew '63 will speak on "The Boxer Uprising and the New China." Mr. Drew was for several years a commissioner of customs in China, holding the rank of mandarin, and has thus had unusual opportunities to know the condition and recent history of the country...
...following vote was passed by the Corporation: "In accepting with regret Professor Strobel's resignation, the Corporation desire to record their high regard for his services to the University, which they know to have been interrupted and now terminated only by a mission offering unique opportunities of public usefulness...
...literature, "The Rivals," "She Stoops to Conquer," and "The School for Scandal." French dramatists, on the other hand, have been producing and are now producing dramatic works that are a part of the literature of France. This is because their drama and literature are wedded, and the French audiences know that their drama is intended to depict life, and not to amuse them by clownery...