Word: arisen
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Most of the "inside" dopesters favor Navy as the new enemy and the rumor has arisen that in the future the Navy and the Army will alternate on the Crimson's schedules. That is, Harvard would play West Point one year, but switch to Annapolis the next, then come back to the Army for the third year. Of course if this is done the Committee will still have to find a team to take the place of Holy Cross, and just what this new outfit will be no one except the H.A.A. officials know at present. One college that...
Difficulties in accomodating the men who are out for basketball have arisen at the Indoor Athletic Building because of the extra burden of Freshman basketball imposed on it by the closing of the Hemenway Gymnasium for college...
...already pointed out, the curious situation has arisen that the backfield, thought at the beginning of the year to offer greatest possibilities of any part of the squad, is now giving Casey and his assistant Myles Lane, lots of food for thought. Defensively such men as Don Jackson have filled the bill entirely, but offensively Freddy Moseley seems to be the only sure bet for gains both by ground and air. The backfield definitely needs a lot more punch for its approaching series of hard games. One source of power that hasn't been tapped is the minute...
...politics. Written with obviously frowning care, The Challenge to Liberty is thick with such muddy passages as this: "Today, these complexities, added to the aftermaths of war, loom large, and the voices of discouragement join with the voices of other social faiths to assert that an irreconcilable conflict has arisen in which Liberty must be sacrificed upon the altar of the Machine Age." Liberals will be surprised to hear Herbert Hoover speaking in defense of Liberalism but will soon discover that what he means by Liberalism is the old U.S. of "rugged individualism." Says...
Since their last meeting as members of the Association of Railway Executives, grave matters had arisen. The Railway Pension Bill had been passed, pay cuts had been restored. They listened in silence while committees reported that payments under the pension bill would add $66,000,000 to their operating costs, the restoration of pay cuts on July 1 another $156,000,000, and increases in materials and equipment prices still another $137,000,000?a grand total of $359,000,000. Newshawks soon learned that they were considering an increase in freight rates to offset these costs. A terse, typewritten...