Word: keezers
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...almost unfortunate that the Phillips Brooks House has selected this season of the year as an opportune time to carry on its drive for funds. When one has been pestered to the point of madness by every variety of agent, including Max Keezer and Lee the Laundryman, the easiest answer is a stentorian and all-embracing "No!" In the case of the Brooks House canvasser, this refusal is not justified. The organization carries on a multitude of extremely worthwhile enterprises, and must depend for its support solely on what it can beg from case-hardened undergraduates. Its success...
Burglars visited the establishment of Max Keezer in the early hours yesterday morning, and departed with clothes valued at $1600. A policeman discovered the door unlocked, and an investigation disclosed the loss. Max was summoned and arrived on the scene at-5.30 to take immediate inventory. "There were no bullets flying", was his brief commentary, "but they cleaned me out of 76 suits...
...know so much about "Nietche" as he thinks he does. And all this on the margins of a book on "Moral Economy"! In a history book, a former reader has cleverly transposed the letters of the name "Kaiser Max", and shifted the order, so that the passage reads: "Max Keezer went forth to battle...
...management of the CRIMSON evidently believes in a 50-50 proposition, fifty percent News and fifty percent Ads, all the way from Jimmie's and Max Keezer to Rogers Peet in New York City and the General Electric in Schenectady. The last named usurps more than a quarter of a page. Page one of Monday's issue is all news but only two columns out of five on page two, one column on page three, two columns on page four. Final score, 10 columns each. This policy may be profitable business, but is it serving the best interests...
...upon that "Sweet Dry and Dry" period which has slipped into place with so little outward effect. In fact, high tragedy has its day; from Mr. McVeagh's protagonist who "gathered up his feet and died" to Mr. Train's delightfully told adventures of Casimir Cashless and the Grand Keezer. Surely, if tradition err not, this is the number of numbers for an Eli to review. Coming from the wilds it has appeared to me that Harvard is essentially a quiet place where the soul is stirred but not to speeches. But--"Thou liest. I am Keezer...