Word: hue
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...Miller of Providence. Mr. Miller has spent nearly two years of painstaking study and experiment on this work. And the result of it has been that even to the eye of the trained observer our collection has all the freshness and glow no less than the timeworn hue of original monuments of antiquity...
...some, college is an amusing four years, to some it means a Phi Beta Kappa key or an education, and to still others it is only four years of dull preparation for a life of banking or insurance. The last attitude has been increasing, to judge by the hue and cry recently raised about the passing of the old "cultural college". That business men, however, regard colleges as mere training schools for their assistants and successors becomes rather doubtful in view of Mr. Emerson's article in the current issue of "The Independent...
...hue and cry raised over the malfeasance and misfeasance in the borrowing of books from the Library, has somewhat obscured a point in the administration of Widener, which, under present conditions, is a constant source of inconvenience to a considerable body of students. In Widener, Room O, the reading-room of the Division of History, Government, and Economics, is at present open on weekdays from 9 to 5, on Saturdays from 9 to 1, and on Sundays not at all. In Room O are kept books constantly in demand by men concentrating in this division and not to be found...
Among other distinguished visitors stopping in Cambridge over the weekend was General Hilarity. His first appearance was at the Copley, where in spite of the somewhat stringent regulations he appears to have had a pleasant time; inspired by the victory and "the crimson hue of the evening sky" (see any newspaper), be was prevailed upon to take part in a scrimmage at the Colonial Theatre; and it is believed that he dined incognito at the Waldorf at an early hour Sunday. The old gentleman finally found the excitement a bit too much for his and is now resting quietly...
Carl Flanders, former Yale line star and coach, says in the Boston Herald: "It is eternally useless to accept anything but the final score, which stands in the records. Nevertheless it must be somewhat comforting to reflect that for 54 minutes of play the hue was distinctly Crimson and that six minutes before the final whistle, a field goal produced a score of 3-0, which seemed to measure, accurately the difference in the performance of the two teams...