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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...this development of homogeneity each step has been in sequence to what has preceded. The first desire for union was the result of fear of the mother country. Later, came the War of the Rebellion, the greatest war the world has ever seen, and the result was a Union, welded in the white heat of civil combat. This was not planned, it was evolved. The policy of national liberality to those who have built railroads and factories, was of vast importance to the further development of the Union. The eighteenth and nineteenth centuries have been characterized by contests for territory...
...Philippines before June 9, 1907, when the next school year begins. The civil service examinations for these appointments will be held in Boston, December 27 and 28. Full information may be obtained at once from the Bureau of Insular Affairs, War Department, Washington, D. C. The circular may be seen at the Appointments Office, University...
...Freshman football eleven was defeated by Yale at New Haven on Saturday by a score of 28 to 0. Throughout the game Harvard was distinctly outclassed and could make no impression on its opponents' powerful line. Yale's offense showed the best attack of a freshman team seen for many years and was practically irresistible. But for an unusual amount of kicking in the second half, Yale would have scored several more touchdowns. Twenty-two points were scored in the first half by using every kind of new and old football tactics with a smoothness and accuracy that completely baffled...
Many of the best seats for the Indian game last Saturday got into the hands of speculators. These seats were put on sale as usual in Cambridge and Boston, and were sold only to Harvard men. Within two hours after the sale they were seen in the hands of speculators, both in Cambridge and Boston. Such a condition of affairs is much to be deplored and it is hard to realize that Harvard men could be guilty of such misdemeanors. Nevertheless, it seems necessary before the Dartmouth tickets are put on sale, to caution Harvard men against a repetition...
...second of a series of lectures on "Social Problems of the Modern City" will be delivered this evening by J. F. Moors '83 in the parlor of Phillips Brooks House at 7.15 o'clock. The subject will be "Relief of San Francisco Seen by a Volunteer". Mr. Moors, who was a member of the committee sent from Boston to administer the aid forwarded by Boston and other cities to San Francisco, will describe the condition of the city after the earthquake and fire, and the work of relief. The lecture will be open to all members of the University...