Word: said
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...What the British admired most in our men," said Captain Alan Gregg '11, M.D. '16, to a CRIMSON reporter in a recent interview, "was their seriousness, and at the same time their keenness in picking up everything...
...should like to congratulate the CRIMSON on its stand in reference to the Harvard Magazine and the scurrilous red-covered parody thereon; but we think a word more might be said...
...Whether this is to be an era of lasting, construction or an age of materialism, so common after a period of war, depends upon the college students more than upon any other group of people in the world," said Dr. John R. Mott, head of the Y. M. C. A. in France, in and interview with a CRIMSON reporter. "The students of Harvard and other American universities," he continued, "bear a larger responsibility in respected to the guidance of reconstruction than those of any of the foreign colleges. In the first place, America has lost fewer of her young...
...mind where we should feel that we need never again prepare ourselves for self-defense. It may not be in fashion now to speak of Washington or his Farewell Address, and it is true that we have gone far since his words of warning were first spoken, but. Washington said one the thing which will be eternally true so long as nations shall exist: "There can be no greater error than to expect or calculate upon real favors from nation to nation. It is an illusion, which experience must cure, which a just pride ought to discard." "A just pride...
...psychology of the authors of the red parody is somewhat unusual. Its brilliant color made it sell like wild fire; red magazines were sticking out of everybody's pockets on Wednesday afternoon. But the attempted blow proved a boomerang. For every copy of the parody sold,--the figure is said to approach 1,500,--a copy of the real magazine was also sold. The satirists gave the true paper the best possible free advertising and undoubtedly doubled if not trebled the circulation of the first number...