Word: trivial
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...risk of seeming trivial we desire to call attention to a peculiar manner in which certain ambitious students are endeavoring to secure a generous return on their investment for membership in the Union. These thrifty individuals are consuming vast quantities of writing paper stamped with the Union crest, in writing theses and taking notes. Possibly these offenders are acting through ignorance, but we are quite sure that their own note paper would never be used for such a purpose. Is the slight saving in stationers' bills sufficient compensation for the loss of self-respect which can but accompany such...
...indeed a satisfaction to learn that the much discussed dramatic club is at last a reality. The language societies occupy a sphere of their own; club theatricals, with one possible exception, are of a purposely trivial sort; but the Harvard Dramatic Club, open to the best talent of the entire University, presents a new field for the rising actor and dramatist. Its productions, we trust, will be of a more earnest and useful type than has yet been attempted; and will, therefore, appeal widely to the more serious side of the University. We extend our best wishes to the organizers...
...hazy familiarity with the habits and private life of the Ancient Romans, and perhaps a more or less thorough understanding of the Indian tribes of the southwest and the varieties of the daisy in Middlesex county. Few men confine themselves to these subjects, but even such information, however trivial it may seem at first thought, gives a broad education to the student and fits him for intelligently taking up and mastering whatever problems his business may develop...
...second, about the extent of possession. Individual ownership in the Middle Ages was less complete than nowadays. Ownership was taken for use and special formalities were performed to make possessions secure. All land was the common property of anyone who could use it, sometimes gratis, sometimes for a trivial payment...
...undergraduates, two prizes of $50 each are offered, one for a translation into Attic Greek of a passage in Green's "Short History of the English People, Chapter X, Section 2, from the words "A trivial riot" through the words "Free and Independent States", and the other for a translation into Latin of a passage in George Eliot's "Middlemarch", Chapter XIX, from the words, "Dorothea has learned to read the signs" through the words "generous trustfulness". These translations must be written by undergraduates of Harvard College in regular standing in 1906-07, and must be handed in not later...