Word: respected
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...unprintable; I have heard voiced charges of "irresponsibility," "immaturity," and "inaccuracy" against the CRIMSON; but I noticed that what the CRIMSON publishes, the Faculty reads, and, when really important issues are discussed by well-in-formed editors, as they frequently are, the CRIMSON's views are quoted with respect in Faculty debates...
...gratitude to the CRIMSON, probably greater than it realizes. Faculty members would, I think, almost universally commend the paper for its occasional "feature articles." They would, I suspect, be less complimentary about the editorials on subjects of which they have special knowledge, but they would be more generous in respect for criticism of other departments than their own. But I don't know whether they would agree or disagree with my own view that the greatest service of all performed by the CRIMSON is in its gathering of news. As the sole daily newspaper at Harvard, it is the principal...
...survive in an "ever expanding universe but contracting free world" we must "respect heterodoxy" and recognize "research which although it may be frightening will ultimately be our salvation," he declared...
...grateful people," placed a Medal of Honor upon each flag-covered casket. In this sparse ritual honoring two men whose particular names are "known but to God,'' a democracy paid tribute to the courage of the assorted millions who fought for its freedoms. And in respect for all those who died in that service, the Unknowns were given burial services by three chaplains, in Latin by the Roman Catholic, English by the Protestant and Hebrew by the Jew. After the boom of a final 21-gun salute, and the rattle of three volleys of rifle fire, the haunting...
...felt, would make him French, and he changed his name accordingly, dropping the "u." Later he admitted that Josephine had come straight from another lover's bed, but there was sentiment of a sort. On St. Helena Napoleon confessed: "I really did love her; I had no respect for her. She was too much of a liar. But there was something taking about her. She was a true woman. She had the prettiest little tail imaginable...