Word: commenter
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...anyone who saw the game words will seem futile and congratulations trite; to those unfortunates who missed one of the opportunities of their lives further comment may seem additionally cruel. Yet to refrain from congratulations to Captain Buell, Coach Fisher and the team after Saturday is impossible, and the CRIMSON adds one more note to the roar of rejoicing that still continues nearly forty-eight hours after the final whistle...
...sins of the younger generation, and especially of college students, have long been a subject for popular discussion; but this year the standard of pessimism has been relatively low. Perhaps moralists have exhausted themselves with criticism of the flapper; for the latest comment is friendly and hopeful in tone. In an editorial entitled "Real College Students", the New York Times suggests that the American college is not all that it should be, and that the fault lies with the undergraduate. It points out a "decline within the last generation in the dominant tone of the student body" and goes...
...answer to this question an interesting, if somewhat--irrelevant comment is the newspaper account of the election held recently in a prominent fraternal order. Twelve officers were elected without difficulty from a group of one hundred and seventy-nine voters. The great Incohee, the Past Great Pocahontas, and the Great Keeper of the Wampum were among those chosen...
Symphony Hall.--Sunday afternoon at 3.30: A violin recital by Jascha Heifetz too famous to need comment. His program embraces two concertos, one the Mozart, the other by Nardini; two Caprices and a Polonaise by Wieniawski and displayful trifles by Beethoven, Sgambati and Grasse...
When F. Scott Fitzgerald wrote "This Side of Paradise", there was a great hue and cry; when "Flappers and Philosophers" appeared, there was still a hue, and somewhat less of a cry; "The Beautiful and Damned" evoked merely a cry;--the best comment on "Tales of the Jazz Age" is dead silence. However, this space must be filled, and a reviewer cannot write, like Hilaire Belloc, on "Nothing". But we will be brief. Perpend...