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...many occasions during the year when the undergraduate body or even individual classes can get together to achieve a feeling of cohesion. The few that do exist must be preserved if the name Yale is to signify anything. Nor are there many traditions which have survived the axe of sophistication and growth...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE PRESS | 2/29/1932 | See Source »

...personal enmity is involved, wills his daughter to his murderer. Complications occur when the daughter (Loretta Young, with braces for her eyes) grows up. She marries the hatchetman but falls in love with a worthless Oriental who takes her to China and sells her into slavery. Robinson with his axe retrieves her. The narrative, sensational and gory, unlikely and over deliberate, resembles a Sunday feature story in a cheap newssheet. Typical shot: an old Tongster (Dudley Digges) registering Chinese imperturbability by blinking when Robinson asks him a question...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: The New Pictures: Feb. 15, 1932 | 2/15/1932 | See Source »

...plan is a significant one. In contrast to Owen D. Young's tearful pleas for money to tide over the starving, here is a hard-headed measure of a man's real willingness to work. The asperities of rock-hammer and timber-axe will soon enough sort out the industrious needy from the conveniently unemployed. Any able-bodied man can keep body and soul together at the work provided without a drain upon the state, thus greatly lessening the need for downright dole...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: TURNING STONES INTO BREAD | 11/25/1931 | See Source »

Says the Stanford Daily, in reply to a letter in its columns, which suggests flaunting the axe at the big game against the Golden Bears. "Of course, Stanford is proud of the 21 who carried it off from under the very noses of the California guardians...But the time is not yet ripe for bringing out the axe." Whatever California wood, it will haft to take a back back: the Golden edge has departed...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: INAXESSIBLE TROPHY | 11/21/1931 | See Source »

Probably the greatest reason that Stanford argues for keeping the axe hidden is that her opponents could not Bear the cutting insult which would result from such uncalled for display. "There is too much to be risked for so little gain in taking the Axe out of the vault this year." Such a statement is almost an axiom. Whosever vault it is, the reaxion of California would be more than keen. Would men not spare their opponents' feelings, the situation might become un-Bearable...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: INAXESSIBLE TROPHY | 11/21/1931 | See Source »

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