Word: matter
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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President Wilson may speak at the University, probably in March, on his return trip to the United States, if an invitation extended to him by the Harvard League of Nations Society is accepted. Secretary Tumulty notified the officers of the Society this week that he has referred the matter to the President, who now has it under consideration...
...newspapers give to the private life of men in high positions and we pay very little attention to it. In the case of Mr. Wilson, however and his foreign mission the practice has been carried to an extreme. The most trivial incidents of his daily life, the most matter of fact circumstances connected with his reception have been advertised with brazen complacency. When the British offered him the only formal entertainment that could be extended to the head of a great nation, the papers made much of the royal treatment this "prince of democracy" was getting. To give...
...interview with a CRIMSON reporter, "is the problem that faces the country today. It is particularly a problem for the college man, who is wondering how he can best fit himself for the important part that he is expected to play in the new work of the world. No matter what he plans to be--business man, statesman, professional man, or anything else--he realizes that his generation will have to face tremendous new problems in every field. This knowledge very naturally brings up in his mind the question: 'Is the college education of today going to help...
...appointments of managers made by the Athletic Committee at its last two meetings were ratified. The Council discussed the question of re-organizing the Union, and appointed the following committee to confer with the Regent in regard to this matter: R. F. Gross '19, chairman, G. C. Barclay '19, A. H. Bright '19, S. R. Dunham '19, J. S. Higgins '20, E. A. Hill '19, and M. A. Shattuck '19. The purpose of this committee is to present to the Regent the undergraduate point of view in regard to the Union and to assist him wherever possible in its reorganization...
...rather ambitious contributions, "The Beggar" and "Lights and Snows"; also in the stories "Yestdo" and "The Glory Look". Nevertheless the workmanship of all these is distinctly good, and what is better, the high seriousness of the verse and the evident sincerity of the prose are joined to subject matter of enough interest and importance to seize even a careless reader. One would like to see in McLane's "Nocturne" reminiscences of Sappho, so simple and clear are the picture and the mood reflected therein. Other excellent verses, including two sonnets, some capital book reviews, and an amusing story, "Dolcezzo...