Word: hornings
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...efficacy of herb medicines "proved by several thousand years' clinical experience." Some, of course, may actually be beneficial: Western doctors do not forget that they have derived modern wonders such as quinine and reserpine from primitive cures. But the vast majority are as useless as ground-up rhinoceros horn to cure impotence. Still, the peasants are being ordered to plant more medicinal herbs, and Government agencies are buying them and keeping prices down. Government chemists are trying to extract pills and concentrates...
Commenting at the Chicago panel on statements from Yale and Princeton which asserted their no-expansion policies, Francis H. Horn, president of the Pratt Institute, said: "This is sheer nonsense unless you admit that Yale or Princeton already has a diluted form of education . . . I think they still have a highly selective group...
...Horn also attacked as undemocratic the position of James B. Conant '14, President emeritus, on the selection of students for higher education. According to Horn, Conant once proposed that only about the top 25 percent in intellectual capacity be admitted to the traditional college...
...Horn's criticism, however, centered around Griswold, whom he quoted as saying that "Yale is not interested in beetle-browed, highly specialized intellectuals, but in well rounded persons." Horn said that Griswold's opinion was anti-intellectual...
...soldering irons and spoke a strange jargon full of "cycles," "decibels," "curves," "roll-offs." Pre-hi-fi sets were unable to top the violin's range (about 8,000 cycles per second) and thus were "unfaithful" to all instruments but bass drum, timpani, bass tuba, piano, French horn and trombone (played softly without mutes). So the hi-fi fan went all out for high frequencies...