Word: commenter
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...Harvard Not Impressive in Gridiron Opener" was the comment of the Boston Herald after last Saturday's double-header. On the other hand come rosy reports from Worcester about the big purple eleven, all of whom played against Harvard last year, reports of punters who can reach seventy yards, of powerful vetern linesmen...
This week's show at Keith's is exceptionally entertaining. From the trained dog bricklayers of Leon Gautier to Madame Rialta's dance act never a moment lags. The leading attraction is of course, Ted Lewis and "the best band in the land"; no comment is needed. Val and Ernie Stanton contribute an extraordinarily garbled dialogue with a harmonica-ukelele duet thrown in. Frank van Hoven keeps the house in a continual uproar by his conversational method of doing sleight-of-hand. With the aid of three small boys he stages a remarkable hubbub--the best laugh producer...
...needless to comment on the Plattsburg plan of supplying men trained in times of peace who are able to serve as officers in any emergency. Too many of us know from experience the complete success of the plan to warrant a repetition or details. To the men who conceived the Plattsburg idea and put it into execution the country is greatly indebted. At the present time there is a feeling that one emergency just past precludes the possibility of another for ages to come; that even if this is doubtful, there are enough trained war veterans to take care...
...without a dint of quilty conscience have we younger graduates and lingering students of Harvard seen the recent editorial comment in regard to the present tendencies of thought in the student body at the University. We have been constantly reminded of the ecumenical wave of "radicalism" that is sweeping the undergraduate off his intellectual feet. We have heard with deadening conviction the results of the diagnosis of students' marks. We have almost recoiled in despair at the revival of the old question of social distinctions, and the intolerant, glib exegesis that has naturally followed. Our guilty conscience has not been...
Arthur Train wrote a letter to the Harvard Crimson in reply to its request for a comment from him on Harvard snobishness. Mr. Train, a Harvard alumnus, said...