Word: mans
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...man who passes his last year at College on the Yard, all the associations of Harvard will naturally revert in his mind to that historic place. When he remembers his college days, he will remember the Yard, the faces and scenes of the Yard, and not the newer buildings of Mt. Auburn street. His college will be the college of the Yard, and its memories will be closely interwoven with the memories of his class. And this is only right, for the Yard, after all, is the real Harvard, and embodies and crystalizes the activities of the University...
...course admit the great, the pressing, need of a new gymnasium building to take the place of Hemenway, long antiquated and outgrown. Even more obvious is the ardent wish of every Harvard man that in time there be erected a fitting and enduring memorial which may ever stand as a concrete tribute to those who fell--a tribute that will recall to successive generations of Harvard men the glory and honor due that gallant group of three hundred and four soldiers and sailors...
Ignorance and illiteracy are the greatest possible obstacles to a free democratic government, a spirit of patriotism and Americanism. It is difficult to expect a man who cannot write his own name, whose whole life is bound up in six days of manual labor and a pay roll at the end, to appreciate the advantages of our particular constitution. Why should he not join the I. W. W., the Bolsheviki or any other organization that promises him more personal advantages, more money, more power. The agents of destruction are amply provided with arguments for his consumption...
...chairman of the Class Day Committee issued the following statement yesterday: "It has been decided that all men who were originally in the class as Freshmen, or have since joined, shall be considered Seniors as far as Class Day is concerned, regardless of their scholastic standing. A man may only be a Junior according to his standing at the College Office, or he may not even be in College, but if he has ever been a member of the Class of 1919 he should realize that this is his Class Day and that at all future reunions on Class...
Lincoln died because the abnormal mind of J. Wilkes Booth was persuaded he was a tyrant. McKinley was stretched on his bier because Czolgosz believed what yellow journalists told him. Clemenceau is on a bed of pain because a man was stimulated into action by poison distilled from the false charge that the great peacemaker was an imperialistic friend...