Word: rulings
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...first place, it is obvious that the Corporation, unless it is to allow its halls to be used by any fanatic who may procure an invitation to come here, must now have some definite regulation on excluding speakers. Up to within a short time there was no such rule. Then, a speaker came whom the Corporation saw fit to exclude. At once there arose the inevitable cry of discrimination. Papers all over the land heralded Harvard's ideas on the particular subject under discussion. As a matter of fact, neither the Corporation nor the vast majority of Harvard undergraduates...
...religious interests". Since this regulation was made by the Corporation and Board of Overseers several days ago, we have received communications and heard some criticism concerning the justice of this move. We print on another page a letter which attempts to show that the Corporation has by this rule made an indirect move against the various political clubs which have been formed to forward the interests of the several candidates for the 1912 federal election. Several days ago we expressed a strong belief in these College political clubs. Therefore, we seize this opportune moment to reconcile the Corporation's unanimous...
...recent meeting of the Corporation the rule refusing the right of the use of the halls of the University for addresses and lectures by women, except such as are invited by the Corporation, was changed to read as follows: "The halls of the University shall not be open for persistent or systematic propaganda on contentious questions of contemporaneous social, economics, political, or religious interests." The wording of the old rule was as follows: "That the halls of the University be not opened to lectures and addresses by women except such as are invited by the Corporation...
...this tract of the Socialist Club, not because we want to see more socialists, nor because it is a remarkable or flawless bit of argument. We have always held that Harvard men should interest themselves in current problems, and Harvard men certainly know nothing about Socialism as a rule. Our most important reason for considering it, however, is that it seems to us that the danger of the movement lies only in the glamor that surrounds it. If this were removed the blind enthusiasm of the fanatic would fade into nothing, and the blind opposition of the conservative would...
Next Monday, R. P. Bass '96, Governor of New Hampshire, will give the sixth lecture in this series, taking for his topic "The Progressive Movement in New Hampshire," and early in March, Congressman William Kent, of California, will give the seventh lecture; his subject will be "Leadership versus Book-Rule in a Democracy...