Word: talked
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...Mandolin Club will play at the Smoke Talk of the Boston Cadets at the Thorndike next Friday night...
Dear Sirs: There has been lately much talk on the accommodations for coaches at the Yale-Harvard game. There also seems to be no authority behind any statements. Now it is necessary for those who have planned to go in coaches to know whether they will be accommodated decently or not, for if the game cannot be seen from coaches, they must make some other arrangements. Will not the CRIMSON find out as to the circumstances, and publish some notice which will have authority, and will be binding? The supporters of the team deserve to know and have a right...
...association to support a general secretary, who could give more time to the work than a regular student. Possibly the newest feature is the work among the sailors in Boston and Charlestown. On Sunday several men go aboard the coal and timber vessels lying near by and talk plainly and frankly with the sailors who are, as a rule, unprejudiced and willing listeners and talkers. The effect of this work is twofold. Besides its effect on the sailors, there is a reflex influence on the men themselves. They find it excellent training...
Notwithstanding the creed which Bishop Keane so ably represents, his appearance at Cambridge did not arouse much discussion. Students criticised his talk, but the unusual sight of a Roman Catholic in Appleton Chaple excited no comment. This fact seems to us worthy of attention, for it is evidence of the breadth of thought which now exists at Harvard, but which is likely to be misconstrued by outsiders. Harvard is essentially liberal in all its ideas. It is our most earnest wish to look at questions from all points of view, and in matters of religion as well as other subjects...
...Michael Davitt discusses the tendencies of labor in Great Britain; ex-President. White of Cornell adds an article to the much debated question of higher instruction in America and the future of the second-class "Universities" with which the country is surfeited. John Burroughs leaves his country scenes to talk of "Faith" and "Credullty." Madame A dam and G. P. A. Healey gossip about subjects with which they are respectively less and more familiar; while Professor Shaler, who turns off magazine articles with astonishing ease, writes on "The Peculiarities of the South...