Word: latters
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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First sign that China was yielding came after Japanese demonstrations in and over Tientsin with troops, tanks and bombing planes, the latter thundering low over Tientsin's foreign concessions. Promptly Governor Yu, whose dismissal Japan had demanded, was dismissed and departed southward with his troops. Five trainloads of Government troops in Peiping were next sent south by Chinese War Minister Ho who prudently imposed iron censorship to keep the troops from knowing why they were being withdrawn, fearing they would mutiny if they knew his treachery to China. Japanese dispatches quoted China's Ho as saying privately...
Tuesday, Field Day, will be climaxed at 7:30 o'clock by dinner "for members of the Class only," at the Harvard Club and informal dancing at the Copley-Plaza. The usual parading will feature in the undergraduate programs for Wednesday and Thursday, and on the latter day the party will officially conclude following Alumni Exercises...
...this latter point, the necessity of Advisers whose advice is available and valuable, the CRIMSON has been harping for several years. It is imperative that the University appreciate the significance of its liberality for Freshmen particularly, and face squarely the fact that the majority of Freshman Advisers are for one reason of little help as guides through the vicissitudes of Freshman year...
...picture is baffled when her own life presents the sort of symptoms she is accustomed to deal with in her patients. Having healed the suicide fits of an heiress (Maureen O'Sullivan) by treating her sweetheart (Louis Hayward) for advanced dipsomania, she finds her maternal instincts for the latter in a state of overstimulation. Her confrère (Herbert Marshall) convinces her that what she mistakes for Love is merely spiritual chicken pox. This is the climax...
...those which feed Harvard. As a result, more and more students will tend to enter College with baby learning in social problems, science, and history, and without the mind training which the classics and mathematics have generally been believed a inculcate. It would be oversimple to maintain that these latter offer the only road to rigorous thinking, because the oldest one. But it is unlikely that equal materials can be found in the mass of secondary schools which must struggle with average teachers and large classes, or for that matter in the select preparatory schools which have become more interested...