Word: reade
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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This matter is just one glaring example of the CRIMSON'S gross inadequacy. Anyone who wishes to know the news about Harvard's football team must read a daily such as the New York Times. Two days before the Yale game the CRIMSON fails to give more than four inches of space to the Varsity team and although the Times gives the complete starting lineup, the CRIMSON again fails in its function as a supposed news organ...
Returning lettermen include Captain Richard W. Emory '35, Howland BN. Stedard '36, Donald V. McGranhan '35, Edward T. Farley '36, and Robert D. Read...
...names of the selections have not been announced, but in the past "Copey," has read from Stephen Leacock, Rudyard Kipling, the Bible, and other sources. Until 1932, when his health forced his withdrawal, Professor Copeland live in Hollis Hall in the yard, and he still maintains a great interest in the undergraduates...
...discussion of the difficult questions of highway cost and cost allocation is equally acute. The problem is essentially one of read classification on the basis of benefits dispensed and to whom. Mr. Owen properly objects to the enstemary classification of roads into vehicle use highways and local use highways with their various sub-groups on the ground that it is too simple to reflect accurately the reality of the situation. He is not, however, prepared to advance an alternative classification of his own, contenting himself rather with the observation that such a classification will only be practicable after extensive traffic...
...smoothness, easily adaptable to the motif of his novels. Thus, in whatever he has to date published, there is a compactness, a unity, and an appeal that makes a lasting impression on the reader. James Hilton is decidedly a man to watch and "Lost Horizon" decidedly a book to read...