Word: keys
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Harvard netmen going to Princeton are W. A. Arensberg '33, G. D. Key, Jr. '33, G. H. Hartford, 2nd '34, S. E. Davenport '34, Richard Inglis, Jr. '33, F. P. Whitbeck '35, F. W. Jones, Jr. '35, J. K. Mitchell, Jr. '34, and J. F. Ray '34. Coach Harry L. Cowles will also...
...Varsity players will be S. E. Davenport, 3rd '34, Richard Inglis, Jr. '33, G. H. Hartford, 2nd '34, W. E. Arensberg '33, G. D. Key...
...philosophic aspect of his subject Mr. Adams refuses to speculate. Only once, after carefully heading his bet, does he launch out into the realm of personal speculation. "I may," he says, "be quite wrong, but from living with the writings of Henry Adams I carry the impression that the key to much of his life and attitude lies in the sentences I have just quoted. The dream of power was always, until it was too late, recurring to him, but he was always a little 'dazed, doubtful, shy." In other words, it appears to me, from Adams' own words...
Voting unanimously last night to defer the election of the majority of its members to the end of the Senior year, the undergraduate body of Phi Beta Kappa took an epechal step toward dissipating the belief of many that a gold key does not mean intellectual power, but merely the ability to grind out high course marks. Although any system of selecting men upon whom to confer recognition of scholastic achievement is necessarily fallible, that based primarily on course marks has, at least at Harvard, been demonstrated inadequate and unjust...
...part in the World War, and that 11 Duce has been industriously hating France since he came to power. England's interests in curtailing the French are plain enough. For one thing, London would like to regain its historic role as arbiter of Europe through a position as they key factor in the balance of power. Moreover, she is noticeably worried over the size of the French air force...