Word: vagabonde
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Music hath charms to soothe the Vagabond's breast, but not the wild clangor of Russian carillons soon to invade his privacy in the Lowell tower. He prefers the softer strains of Symphony Hall concerts such as that colorful performance of The Don Cossacks on Sunday afternoon...
Rather a far cry from the cadences of Paderewski is the lecture on the present situation in Soviet Russia at the Cambridge Club tonight, but Professor Sorokin, the speaker, is one of the Vagabond's latest enthusiasms and he cannot afford to miss this opportunity to hear first hand and authoritative information on the Professor's native country...
...Vagabond has always retained a secret sympathy for the historic Charles Townsend Copeland. It must be disconcerting enough to be a "Character." It must be still worse to be a walking Harvard Tradition. As the time approaches for the perennial reading at the Union, the Vagabond realizes that a generation has grown up which knows not Copey, now grandiloquently Emeritus. Through the honeyed sentimentality of the Copy legend, there emerges from Hollis only a slight figure covered with a derby and an air of complete detachment. When the day arrives and the raw recruits upsurp the mellow places, the vagabond...
...that as if may, however, the Vagabond has already marked November 16 on his Calendar in red Ink. He will be at the Union to hear Copey this year as he has been for many years past. But everyone known the Vagabond would not even think of boing elsewhere on such an occasion...
...Vagabond finds little in today's or tomorrow's academic assortments to tempt his roving fancy, but he happened to hear that M. Pierre de Lanux was to speak under the auspices of the Harvard Liberal Club tomorrow evening in Emerson F at 8 o'clock. His subject is "Our International Ethics," and it is the paradox of the title that first drew the Vagabond's attention to the lecture. For he has always been under the impression that anything was fair in love, war, or international politics and that perfectly respectable men who were nice to their mothers would...