Word: mournfully
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...Bushnell (Princeton, '21), former director of the U.S. Olympic Committee. They mourn The decline of the eating clubs, the admission of women students, the opening of campus activities to local residents. Says Jones...
...Much to Mourn. Europe had much to mourn too. France, heading toward what now promises to be a knife-edge election, could well emerge with a left wing President at odds with the Gaullist majority in the National Assembly. It would then become the latest addition to the Continent's already long list of sickly, shaky democracies. That list includes minority or coalition governments in Italy, Denmark, Sweden, Belgium and Britain...
...controversy is an exodus of senior faculty from the Houses to more comfortable and isolated suburban residences. If this scenario comes to pass, he feels that the House system will be inalterably damaged and undergraduate education will suffer a major loss--a loss, he believes, few Faculty members will mourn...
...their patron but because he was their brother. It is not only that the United States may have been directly involved in the coup that concerns us. Chile matters to us primarily because a just revolution was ended and many good people were murdered. Even as we mourn their deaths, we draw renewed courage from the examples of their lives...
Reston cares about the bicentennial; the people do not. They are not sad, and they do not mourn the decline of the presidency or the tarnishing of the Republic. The people care about money and job security; they leave shattered political ideals to the columnists. But then Reston never talked to the people; he thinks he speaks for them, but he does not. Until 1968 he reported in addition to writing his column. His columns were filled with sub-stantiating evidence; they often revealed information not found elsewhere in the press. But since he has abandoned reporting--except for occasional...