Word: behinder
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...Alfred Worcester '78 Professor of Hygiene at the University will deliver the address to the Seniors in the Chapel Service on the morning of Class Day, it has been announced by the Class Day Committee. The Seniors will assemble behind locked doors at 9 o'clock on June 19 with no one present from outside the class except Dr. Worcester...
...wind blew cold over the dunes of the course at Sandwich; the sun was hidden behind rolling clouds. Only a Scot could enjoy golf on a day like this, but Jurado played quietly on. Most of the Americans had turned their scores in. Tommy Armour was out, eliminated on the second day after a hopeless round, but Barnes was in the running, so were Mehlhorn and Sarazen, and as for Hagen, he was leading and looked like a certain winner-Hagen, who had been acting in the movies all winter, who had given his clubs away and decided only...
Jurado finished almost by himself. He stood beside the green while Sarazen and his great gallery came up. Sarazen putted and the ball dropped but it didn't help- he was two strokes behind. A minute later the people were carrying Hagen on their shoulders to the clubhouse where the Prince of Wales would give him the cup. Hastily Jurado handed in his own score, an 80 that put him in a tie with Barnes for fifth place, noticing as he passed the board that Hagen's total was 292, Sara-zen's 294, Archie Compston...
...actual fact that this progress depends in no small measure upon Ford being in the field of production." Then, with what might have been either sarcasm or concern, he added that he was surprised at Henry Ford's statement that he [Mr. Ford] was 1,000,000 cars behind orders. Said Mr. Raskob: "I thought at the rate of 8,000** cars a day Ford would be caught up by this time...
...Brown--two among many--have come, each representing a different attitude. Mr. Spaulding, a professor of Philosophy at Princeton, has attacked the subject of "What Am I"? and "What Shall I Believe"? with the full weight of a wide knowledge of philosophy, modern psychology, and the physical sciences behind him. Working up gradually, through an ethical philosophy to the concept of religion in general, as distinct from any particular theology, he builds his foundation upon the basis of generally accepted scientifically demonstratable truths. To bridge the charm between philosophy and religion, one must, however, as Mr. Spaulding points out, take...