Word: felted
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...gubernatorial race, at the same time promised him support for the Senate. The first came about a month ago. The last was delivered in person by Chandler's wife Buff. Said she last week: "Goodie and I are old friends. I told him I felt he couldn't win. If that influenced him, I don't know, although I heard that it did." It did-because behind Buff Chandler lay the potential Times influence in drying up Goodie's press and financial support across the state...
Shue said he felt that, in spite of Princeton's highly-rated power, the game would be a close one. Kickoff time is 10:30 a.m., at the Business School Field...
...while these isolated cases all agreed in criticizing the Lampoon and the small minority at Harvard for its bad manners, the average undergraduate at both colleges did not treat the matter with any great seriousness. The student at Cambridge felt that the Tiger football players were a little rougher than ordinary and that their undergraduate body did overdress; while the man of Princeton, although somewhat rankled at being called an underwear salesman, still looked forward to the next football game with the Crimson as one of the highpoints of the fall. This was apparently the limit of the "evident animosity...
...surprise and dismay at the news. The New York Times declared, "Let Locarno perish and the League of Nations fall, but the Big Three must and shall be preserved." It was not to be, however. W.J. Bingham '16, Director of Athletics "regretted the action" and pointed out what he felt lay at the root of Princeton's decision to break with Harvard. The "root" supposedly had to do with the college's feeling that the rivalry between the two colleges had become somewhat "aggravated" in the last few years. No one really understood what was meant by this...
Another example of the theory of education is furnished by the combination in 1949 of the School of Humanistic Studies and the School of Economics and Politics into the School of Historical Studies. The Institute felt that the study of economics and politics was not ideally suited to the approach to learning which the Institute should take. The Institute has only limited facilities for statistical analysis and is some-what divorced by both location and philosophy from current affairs. In such an atmosphere the systematic study of economics and politics seemed somewhat out of place...