Word: cline
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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There you have the gist of the book. It is definitely amoral, generally convincing, superhumanly individualistic in thesis, and most readable. You may not approve of the author, but at least Mr. Cline is an artist. He will bear future watching...
...Leonard Cline, like Paulus his protagonist, has defied the laws and conventions of the commonplace and has created an original and powerful novel tinged with the color of Finnish legends and folklore...
...Student, lately rejuvenated intercollegiate newsweekly, of no visible party bias, last week published its own, semi-complete survey of "the political fervor in the colleges." It found that this fervor seemed to de- cline "in proportion to the distance of the institution from Washington, D. C." Republican headquarters had reported 300 active Coolidge clubs, the result of expenditures by Chairman Butler. The Davis College League listed 100 clubs. The LaFollette forces, lacking literature, had created no clubs directly, but clippings from the undergraduate press convinced the editors of The New Student that there were as many La-Follette as Davis...
Class of 1926: E. M. Bailen, W. B. Cline, G. W. Cottrell, P. M. Fekula, R. M. Fuoss, T. B. Massell, P. E. Mosely, J. R. Oppenheimer, A. O. Ortiz, M. H. Radovsky, J. E. Stocker, D. W. Wallwork...
Austin Scholarships,--A. P. Black of Gainesville, Fla.; C. W. Chenoweth of Moscow, Idaho; J. M. Cline of Schenectady, N. Y.; A. Constans of Northampton; E. D. Fagan of Los Angeles, Calif.; A. R. Knipp 2G, of Baltimore, Md.; C. D. MacIlroy of Milo, Mo.; F. O. Nolie of State College, Pa.; L. H. White of Williamsburg...