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Those who are not going home for Thanksgiving will find good cheer at Phillips Brooks House. Brooks House does many good things but one of its best services is making the holidays pleasant for the men who must spend them in Cambridge, a Stygian fate indeed for one who has no friends living here...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THANKSGIVING CHEER. | 11/25/1914 | See Source »

...fourteen members of the Federation who attended the meeting in the Union last evening to hear Dr. Fitch, the handbook, having no definite custodian, has strayed off the road into oblivion somewhere between here and last September. It was established with an ideal worthy of a better fate. If the Territorial Clubs are insistent upon dying, it will, we suppose, descend eventually to that already overburdened organization--the Student Council--for support. But if the Territorial Clubs can revive sufficiently to lay the responsibility of discovering the erring booklet on a committee of three or four men, the same...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: BOOKLET LOST! | 4/14/1914 | See Source »

...University does not remember a two weeks' Christmas vacation. It is a long time to be away from Cambridge just before mid-years; but it is a longer time to stay in Cambridge in the haunted solitudes of the deserted College. Yet the men who are doomed to that fate will not find Cambridge completely cold and empty, for there will be Christmas parties at President Lowell's and at Phillips Brooks House and two University Teas during the recess. These are hardly perfect substitutes for parties at home, but they come from a heartfelt desire on the part...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: FAREWELL CAMBRIDGE. | 12/20/1913 | See Source »

...White said that it is the fate of every man to be a demagogue at one time or another in his life. We are now in a new era, an era of economic and political changes, an era of radicalism. But what is it that makes this era, that that keeps it alive? It is the demagogues, the men who are crafty, frequently selfish and regardless of public opinion, but always alive,--very much alive. The are the ones who are looking upwards and ahead. It is the tide of progress that has brought the Radical to the fore. There...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: DEMAGOGUES AND RADICALISM | 2/24/1912 | See Source »

...children fashioned Cuba's fate...

Author: By J. G. Gilkey ., | Title: "Boston as Seen From the Harvard Bridge" | 6/14/1911 | See Source »

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