Now that the Reading Period, mid-year examinations, first meetings of classes and the Boston opera season are over, it is wholly as it should be that the Student Vagabond should once more take to the boardwalks of the Yard--and the columns of the CRIMSON. The Vagabond himself, be it remarked quietly--entre nous is the expression if one sits in the Diamond Horseshoe--has just returned from a trip to Bermuda which he had promised himself for a long time, in fact ever since the muddy slush in the holes of Massachusetts Avenue began to get on his nerves and in his shoes. But even the in-elemency of New England weather, and his interest in the onion and Easter lily crop in Bermuda--which is doing nicely, thank you--could not keep him from what he considered a duty as well as a pleasure. For man does not live by--but we all know that story.
In any case, the Student Vagabond has returned to his haunts, and while for obvious reasons he cannot, as he promised in the fall, find actual violets blossoming by the wayside, nevertheless, he has no doubt that there are a number of flowers, blushing--we trust not unseen--in Harvard, Sever, or where you will.
In fact, the following list should contain matters of interest for almost everyone.
TODAY
10 O'clock
"The History of Zoology," Professor Parker, Geological Lecture Room.
"France and the American Civil War," Professor Baxter, Harvard 2.
"The Issues of Recent Philosophy," Professor Perry, Emerson A.
11 O'clock
"The Art of War in the Sixteenth Century," Professor Merriman, Emerson J.
12 O'clock
"Drafting of the Covenant of the League of Nations," Professor Wynne, Harvard 3.
2 O'clock
"The Present Constitution of the British Commonwealth of Nations," President Lowell, Harvard 6.
"Maimonides on Faith and Reason," Professor Wolfson, Emerson H.
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