Word: doned
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...Already taxes have been restored to a peacetime level. . . . This is progress in the right direction. There is still much more that can be done . . . when revenues show sufficient permanent increase. There is a growing demand for a further reduction in taxes on earned incomes . . . with which I have always been in sympathy as is evidenced by the recommendations the Treasury made to Congress. . . . The Treasury is still of this opinion and will be glad to see these principles [of tax reduction] still further carried into law whenever revenues justify such action...
...Crimson horsemen will line up tonight as they have done in all the tournament games so far this season with E. T. Gerry '31 and T. B. Glynn ocC bearing the offensive burden, at their positions of No. 2 and No. 1, while Captain Clark will take his position at back. It was Clark's great individual playing which was the main factor in the P. M. C. victory and Harvard hopes are again pinned on his shoulders tonight. Tonight's game is in the second round and should the Harvard team emerge victorious it will be in the finals...
...article goes on to point out the extremely fine work done by the University of California, (especially its English Club productions in the Greek Theatre) and the other progressive developments in universities. But the trend of thought was to show how Harvard was a pioneer, and to speak of the high standard which had been at the basis of the work...
Huguley won the lateral passing contest beating out F. J. Gilligan '32, Freshman backfield star, and T. F. Mason '30 who played halfback on the squad last fall. In the punting contest it was expected that Huguley would win handily because of the fine kicking he has done so far this Spring but R. F. Gleason '32 outdistanced him to win the laurels in this event. M. J. Finlayson '32 placed third...
...hurry to learn what damage radium had done, one William W. Cardow, Waterbury, Conn., motor mechanic, had an autopsy performed on his wife a few hours after her death last week. Dr. Frederic Flinn, Columbia University radium poisoning specialist, was summoned by telegraph and he, with a Waterbury pathologist and dentist, took the body apart. They found that its jawbones were decayed, also parts of the skull, a bone in the right thigh, and four teeth. The heart and lungs were sound, but other internal organs yellow with...