Word: gone
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...that is a crime, let them go holler their heads off. The public seems to have gone crazy and there is a lot of hot air in the Senate about this oil thing, but it will not disturb me, because my transactions were absolutely legitimate...
...Hastings, however, in urging a return to the standards of the past, seems to have forgotten that the public taste, in large measure, see the standards of the present; he must take it upon himself to say that these are better or worse than what have gone before. The eccentricities of style and the general morbidness of subject matte that seems to characterize most authors of the present day probably reflect a prevailing restlessness in the public mind. Although these peculiarities may not now seem to lead toward any definite goal, it is unfair to condemn them in the mass...
...utter dearth of information concerning our duties which made our tasks doubly difficult. We hope that such a situation will never again arise and that each class will follow our example, so that in succeeding years Freshman Executive Committees may look over the reports of those who have gone before, take advantage of their suggestions, and profit by their mistakes...
...Campbell's statement was the sole surprising feature of the meeting which ushered in the 1924 baseball campaign. He informed his listeners that five or six very promising candidates had gone on probation at mid-years and emphasized the fact that the first baseball battle was with the April hour examinations. In conversation with newspapermen after the meeting Mr. Campbell argued that public mention of the scholastic difficulties of athletes might spur them on to more serious study. He was aware, he said, of the practice of quieting reports of men being barred from competition because of classroom deficiencies...
...Indian came down from the Northland, gathered in four scalps for the three he lost, and went about it in a very business-like fashion--as any of the Sunday sporting pages will tell. But now the Indian has gone back to his Northland for another season, and John Harvard has still to face the Bulldog in New Haven...