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...surprising that guesses differ. Some people think that the Faculty did not want the players to lose additional study time at the end of the season just to play in the tournament. Others think that the Administration did not want to assume the extra expenses of a trip and hotel bills. Many more think that Harvard declined to enter the NCAA's because it was afraid of losing--especially when the decisions came out late in the season, apparently after the Faculty had seen how good the team was. Still others just don't know what to think. The press...
...sums up the Texan of today by quoting British Journalist George Warrington Steevens' summary of the turn-of-the-century American: "He may make his mind easy about his country. It is a credit to him, and he is a credit to it. You may differ from him, you may laugh at him; but neither of these is the predominant emotion he inspires. Even while you differ or laugh, he is essentially the man with whom you are always wanting to shake hands...
...fighting for its existence it asked for faith and time. Both were granted. It is unfortunate that the long wait and the show of faith (as exemplified in the substantial monetary pledges this fall) have not been more handsomely repaid. Actually, the Constitution being presented for ratification does not differ tremendously from the one the Council had when it toppled. No new lines of action are drawn...
...that the Daily Princetonian neither looks nor sounds like the CRIMSON would be quite an understatement. In fact, except that both are student newspapers published at Ivy League colleges, there is virtually no common ground between them. They differ as to what stories are important, what tone is appropriate, and how the major editorial policies should be determined...
...were deep in a conversational subject that has taken over the U.S.-survival under atomic attack. At cocktail parties and P.T.A. meetings and family dinners, on buses and commuter trains and around office watercoolers, talk turns to shelters. Almost everyone-man, woman and child-has an opinion. Those opinions differ wildly. Many feel that blast and fallout shelters are cowardly. "They would convert our people into a horde of rabbits, scurrying for warrens, where they would cower helplessly while waiting the coming of a conqueror," said Major General John B. Medaris (ret.), former chief of the Army Ballistic Missile Agency...