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Word: good (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1940-1949
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Usage:

Nipped in the bud long before game-time, the stunt was first conceived by the students last Monday night as an "initiative towards a good, clean Harvard-MIT rivalry...

Author: By Douglas M. Fouquet, | Title: MIT Sources Reveal Stadium 'Blast' Story | 11/22/1948 | See Source »

Handsome Dan, Yale's Bulldog, didn't have a very good day either. The Harvard Band came over during the half and blew in his car and then there was that damn turkey. A couple of guys, Harvard cheerleaders by the looks of them, brought this tough old bird over to do combat. But Dan wasn't having any, not with something that flew and pecked and scratched. He showed the turkey his rear and made it very plan he wanted to be left alone. After the game, when the noise really started, Dan made a boe-line...

Author: By George G. Daniels, | Title: Riotous Crimson Partisans Rip Up Goalposts, Yale Men | 11/22/1948 | See Source »

...lunches or dinners. The number of meals produced per employee is greater in the central kitchen, and the flavor and quality of these meals is definitely inferior. Dispensing meals can never be like building automobiles or libraries, because it is the little extras which spell the difference between good and poor meals. Dishes which have been salted with a shaker always seem tastier than ones in which a pre-determined amount has been dumped and stirred around with an car. Lugging vats of meat and vegetables through stifling steam tunnels to House Dining Halls necessarily renders most food tasteless...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Food Problem: I The Central Kitchen | 11/22/1948 | See Source »

...would be very simple to blame all the food difficulties on the impersonal gargantuanism of the central kitchen, but such a simplification is unwarranted. Even in the best House Dining Halls, the food is not good, though the students are not driven to complaints by its inadequacies. In addition, the University has sunk hundreds of thousands of dollars in the central kitchen and now cannot be expected blithely to abandon it as a poor idea. The quality of Dining Hall food in the five Houses attached to the central kitchen does not require poor meals. It may never rise...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Food Problem: I The Central Kitchen | 11/22/1948 | See Source »

...audience at Sanders was packed Friday night; the men on the stage wore tails. Despite their respective constrictions, both groups had a good time, for the tradition of Harvard-Yale Concerts was interpreted in liberal fashion. After an Elegy and Bach Cantata, the Harvard Club launched into several choruses from "Patience" and the audience caught on: they were to enjoy themselves, not to appraise. Whereupon the two groups of singers pushed into their concert with a gusto that belied the forbidding impressions created by their formal stance and ceremonial dress...

Author: By Donald P. Spence, | Title: The Music Box | 11/22/1948 | See Source »

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