Word: rakings
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...period of strain and stress is certain to be followed by a period of relaxation. During that period, fortunately or unfortunately. New Haven is scattered with guests, and the country is scattered with undergraduates. There is a tendency on such occasions for the youthful rake to indulge in excessive drinking, which brings sadly enough disrepute upon the University. Couse quently it is the undergraduate duty, whether at dances in New York. New Haven or Hartford, to remember the debt and responsibility to Yale and to act as a gentleman will, rationally and with discretion. For liberty without responsibility leads...
...were needed, the horticultural activities in the Yard furnish it. The superannuated gentry who appear from nowhere each spring and with withered hands minister to sadly bedraggled borders, are with us once again. Not content with knocking off our hats as we pass, by the vigorous sweeps of their rake handles or with flinging grass seed inadvertently upon our newest outing garments, these ancient toilers have this year, conceived the notion of erecting formidable wire entanglements about arbitrary to man's lands, and thus sheltered they enjoy ham sandwich "spreads" during the noon hour in perfect travesty of Class...
...Mont Blanc carried a huge amount of the new explosive, trinitrotuluol, T.N.T., a glistening pale-yellow powder, as potent as nitroglycerine, though safer to handle. Moreover, the situation of the ship in the half-mile-wide Narrows, between two rising shores, seems to have caused the blast to rake the city with peculiar effectiveness...
...such a course to meet the rigid demands of the high standard of scholarship which the University has always maintained. Student life a Harvard is as serious and as purposeful and the standard of deportment and of manhood as high, as at any college in the world, and the rake, rich or poor, is not prominent in that life"--Charleston; W. Va., gazette...
...should not the Monthly and the Advocate muck-rake each other? We offer a few suggestions for the Monthly's opening attack. It may point out that the account of the Council of Federated Clubs is informing but prosy; that the "Tale--Full of Sound and Fury" really signifies nothing, and is unspeakably silly; that in "An International Love Affair" a fair story is marred by an effort to be smart; that the "Three Moods of the Marsh" are vague and vapid. (Alliteration is always effective in muck-raking; the fitness of the words is less important). The critic...