Word: columns
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...then, on January 21, in the first five column CRIMSON banner except for Yale game stories--announced that Copeland would retire at the end of the year and that Hollis 15 would be his room...
...CRIMSON attempted to build up English-style debating as a counter-attraction to football, though it continued to run news of practices in the lead column each day. Indeed, the English influence was heavy on the College all year: Gilbert Murray was giving the Norton lectures, the Cambridge debaters created a sensation with their winning arguments for government regulation (F. W. Lorentzen was one-third of the Harvard team), the tutorial system was just taking hold, and reading periods patterend on Oxford's were instituted for the first time at any American university...
Next day the kids did something unprecedented. They paid for a three-column bread & butter note in the Creston News Advertiser: "Thanks to the people of Creston. We had such a good time . . . We'll never forget...
Cinemactor Lionel Barrymore, a bright-eyed 75, with his first novel (Mr. Cantonwine) newly done, acknowledged that he was preparing a few sample columns for a newspaper syndicate. "There's nothing I'd like better than to be able to sound off about my favorite ideas," he rumbled. "They think I'm a sweet old man. Wait till they start reading my column...
Lawyer Littell charged that Pearson had damaged him by writing in his column: "The Justice Department is casting a quizzical eye on ... Norman Littell. They have reports that Littell is acting as a propagandist for the Dutch government, though he failed to register as a foreign agent." The jury decided that Pearson was wrong on his facts because Littell had never worked for the Dutch government...