Word: felt
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...teaching be done on such a scale?" they asked, We are not far from the stage at which the same question can be appropriately raised within our own precincts. Somewhere or other there must be a point at which the law of diminishing returns begins to make its influence felt in the college classroom." New York Times...
Anyone who was at the St. James on Monday night must have felt that the term "prize play" is a trifle misleading. For while "Mamma's Affair", which won for Miss Butler the Morosco prize for 1919, is an interesting and often clever little piece, it can scarcely be termed anything very exceptional. Certainly it is free from the taint of being "highbrow" which is so often associated with the name of Harvard, and a well-filled house received with apparent enjoyment the oft repeated walling of "mamma", who is a "sentimental hypochrondiac". The first act is slow, the second...
Extra time granted, as last year, to students living at certain distances from Cambridge, at the beginning of the recess, does not essentially help the situation. It is especially at the end of the recess that its crataped nature is very unpleasantly felt. New England, New York, and even Washington (D, C.) students may remain at home until late on January second. Southerners and many Westerners, on the contrary, must leave for college before New Year's or at best, early New Year's morning. Two years age the recess was extended to include January fourth, to the gratification...
Although I have read the CRIMSON almost daily for six years, I have never felt so impelled to reply to a letter in it as to that of Mr. Hollowell in this morning's issue. His attitude reflects that of most graduate students who are not Harvard graduates...
...attended Wednesday's mass meeting must have felt, consciously or unconsciously, the need of a new Harvard song in Princeton's honor. Harvard football lyrics are replete with the mention of Eli and the Blue but tradition has slipped a cog as far as the Black is concerned. With Princeton games at attracting the universal interest which has been evinced in recent years, and with the splendid manifestations of undergraduate "thuse" which we have seen at pre Princeton mass meetings, what is to prevent John Harvard from making a new kind of joyful noise at next year's encounter with...