Word: said
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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However, things were not always this way. In the days when "a particularly desperate scrimmage flattened the ball into a disk of limp rubber"--in the days when the New York Times said that the "Harvard punting was immense, the handling of kicks without a flaw, the plunging irresistable and the end running brilliant, all in the same game," students were "football-conscious." Old CRIMSONS report that in 1909 over 1500 students cheered the scrimmage the week before the Yale game...
Commenting on the purchase-card system at the request of Allen E. Kline '50, chairman of the purchase committee, Harris, who said he was speaking "as an economist who has some interest in the problem of financing higher education," stated that payment of college costs is "a great burden" on the average American family...
...post scriptum of his statement, Harris said he hoped savings would be used 'to improve the quality of the students' education . . . and not primarily to increase the number of nights...
...true that McNiel read the story at 2 a.m. But after perusing the article, McNiel said that although it seemed somewhat tactless, it was a good story and would show students that "HYRC was really doing something." He offered not a single objection...
...HYRC alludes to our story of November 8. This story recited the facts listed above. It also contained a statement by Jansen: he denied that he had made the November 7 remarks and he said that "McNiel was unqualified and incompetent to make the statements." (Here Jansen seemed to recognize that the November 7 statements were not, as he now claims, "dreamed up.") Of our November 8 article, the HYRC now says: "This is also untrue...