Word: talking
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...have splendid opportunities, through the Harvard professors and students, to learn the available lesson--to make our life's achievements larger. We must open mindedly study to appreciate what is good in the customs and ideas of the American people. We are taught how to talk, how to write from left to right, and how to be in close touch with all phases of actual American life. The spirit of higher education, which enables us to see the social and moral activities of Harvard, finds response in our hearts. It shows us a type of education, different from that...
...true friends of the American students and to tell them of Japan. She believes that the students can become the real mediators between the two countries. Those of us who are attending Harvard have an opportunity to carry her message to the Americans, and on the other hand to talk to our people through the Japanese newspapers and magazines...
...were these: Dual track meets with the University and Princeton; no secret practice, no scouting, keeping the field and bowl open Sundays and the employment of seasonal coaches to assist the director of athletics. This last point has been much discussed and there has been a great deal of talk about abolishing seasonal coaches. Dean Briggs was especially in favor of this...
...President Taft in his speech before the working people of Boston last Friday evening, said that all political and social misunderstandings could be done away with if people could only get together and talk things over. He quoted as an example of the truth of this statement his own experience with Frank P. Walsh. They had cordially disliked each other view on labor until they were placed on the same board. Since that time they have ceased criticizing and have developed a constructive program of reform...
After five weeks of talk covering every phase of athletics, the University had the right to expect that some results would be forthcoming from Tuesday's meeting in New York. Dr. Sargent, Major Moore, Percy Haughton, all have advanced their opinions. The CRIMSON, in conjunction with the daily papers of Yale and Princeton, has announced a program moderate enough to please the most conservative. Undoubtedly in a matter of such importance as this no hasty decision must be entertained; on the other hand the undergraduates deserve to be given some information as to the progress that is being made...