Word: worldly
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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Therefore, we, the undersigned students of Harvard University, desire to express our most urgent hope that you will do everything possible to restore to the natives their rights guaranteed by the Treaties of Berlin and Brussels; also, recognizing the world-wide influence of your utterances, we beg that you will make some public pronouncement upon this subject...
...this difference of point of view, but in relation to the larger outside world, Professor Zueblin stands for the side seldom presented from platforms of this University. Just as undergraduates believe that the undergraduate community should be an organized unit, Professor Zueblin believes that society at large is an organized whole. Right or wrong, the view is one which, in its relation to the history that is making in this country today, must at least be considered. And a more delightful exposition of it than Professor Zueblin's it would be hard to find...
...following article in the series published by the Intercollegiate Civic League is by Arthur Brisbane, editor of the New York Evening Journal. Mr. Brisbane has also held the position of London correspondent of the New York Sun, as well as having been managing editor of the New York World. the article follows...
...those who, as undergraduates, knew Dean Shaler, and were in touch with his wonderful personality, few remain in Cambridge. They have scattered throughout the world, carrying with them that priceless experience. It now remains for 1908, the last class that spent a full year at Harvard while Professor Shaler lived, to perpetuate his memory among the generations to come, by hanging his portrait in the Living Room of the Union. It is a fitting gift, for which the committee in charge should feel it an honor to arrange; and which the class should feel it a greater honor to bestow...
...sometime assisted in the more or less fortnightly appearance of Lampoon, turn to him always with the best will in the world to be amused. We are loath to be denied and, where we must, eagerly accord the benefit of the doubt. We realize that only spasmodically does he achieve his full destiny of Chorus to this University drama; only too often he is the conventional Vice, with his lath dagger become a slapstick. It is his business to be local and timely; it is our good fortune if he be sometimes sage and witty. And of the few good...