Word: stated
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...should like, however, to point out that the musical clubs on the Christmas trip have done the same thing. Last winter, for instance, the advent of the Harvard musical clubs at Indianapolis was the signal for the reunion of Harvard graduates from many parts of the State of Indiana. After the entertainment at the Republican Club a meeting was held and the Harvard Alumni Association of Indiana (I think that was the name of it) was formed. I have never seen any public mention of this fact. Of course the fact itself was of no consequence when the musical clubs...
...Herron is an apostle of social reform from the standpoint of Christian Idealism. The church, the state, man, human relations are Christian only as they embody a sacrificial quality of life. The whole social order is measured and tested from the standpoint of sacrifice. In the application of this doctrine, Dr. Herron is logical and unflinching. His results are, in certain cases, extreme, and to some, his conclusions seem even to be unsafe. But the directness of his teaching, his earnestness, his insight and his eloquence give him a large hearing wherever he speaks. He has travelled all through...
Communications are so frequently sent to the CRIMSON for publication and so many have to be rejected for failing to comply with the most obvious requirements that it seems necessary to state what the purpose of the communication column is and to name these requirements...
...Harvard Good Government Club. Meetings will be held every two weeks. Through discussions and informal talks given by men actively engaged in politics, the club hopes to give its members some insight into the ways of political management, and some appreciation of the problems of municipal and state government. The club is absolutely non-partisan. Any member of the University wishing further information may obtain it from the secretary, C. A. Brown, Jr., '97, 11 Weld Hall...
...nasal vowels there was a decided difference, but we are unable to state just the amount of it. We know that there were two nasal vowels in old French, a and e before nasal consonants. But there is this striking difference that the n is not swallowed up in the vowel, but that an and en were possibly pronounced after the English fashion...