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After it became known yesterday that the La Follette--Wheeler Club had been evicted from Apthorp House, the Liberal Club extended an invitation to the organization to share its quarters on Winthrop Street. The letter follows: "Mr. L. R. Brown, President, Harvard La Follette-Wheeler Club, Harvard University, Cambridge, Mass...
...Klepeer (elected delegate) from each Realm, the Great Titan of each Province (subdivision of a Realm) and one Klepeer (elected delegate) from each Province. The delegation from each Realm has as many votes as there are hundreds of Klansmen in that State. The individual delegates cast their proportional share of the Realm's voting strength in the Klonvocation. The Imperial Officers are also members of the Klonvocation. The presiding officer of the Klonvocation is the Imperial Klaliff (First Vice President). All acts of the Klonvocation become laws of the Empire within one hour of passage, unless vetoed within that time...
...Mahdi, the Sudan was conquered by British and Egyptian troops, under the able leadership of Sir H. H. (afterwards Lord) Kitchener. The next year, 1899, an Anglo-Egyptian condominum in the Sudan was established. Under the terms of this agreement, Britain claimed, "by right of conquest," a share in the legislation and administration of the country. This claim has ever since been asserted (TIME, Aug. 25). Moreover, during this period, Britain has rescued Egypt from the hands of the Turks, under whom she was a "tribute-paying viceroyalty"; and, from a British Protectorate, has made her a quasi-independent state...
Then there is the Suez Canal problem. The Canal is owned 'by an international company operating from Paris. Its defense was undertaken entirely by Britain, and, in order to defend it, a share in the government of the Sudan was a most necessary condition. Moreover, the Suez is the "Gate to India" and Britain is never likely to relinquish the key without a considerable struggle...
...forty years of its existence the Division of Music in the University may be said to have done its share in furnishing composers, teachers of theory, conductors, performers, and critics of music. It is the hope of the Department that this experiment will add to the quota of distinguished personalities who have received their first serious musical training in Cambridge...