Word: scarely
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...Hemenway for a return engagement. The 38 to 16 Harvard triumph surprised the team's most sanguine supporters fully as much as it did the Green invaders, who were completely outplayed from the first whistle to the last. St. Francis College two days later gave the Crimson a real scare, losing by a scant point in a hard-fought fray...
...annual scare provided by the rising Seine once again alarmed Paris. Heavy rain and a thaw of snow in the mountains have swollen the river to such an extent and at such an early date as to cause the liveliest apprehension. The feet of the Zouave on the Alma Bridge were reported covered with water?which meant a considerable rise...
...should be conscripted for the nation's need. To be sure, the idea is not new. It was suggested by the late President Harding last Summer. But the Monitor monarch proposes that a Constitutional Amendment shall be passed making this triple conscription obligatory- and thereby in the future scare all classes of society out of jingoism. In pursuance of his editorial decree, the front page of the Monitor has been placarded heavily with notices of the decree, giving the opinions of people -from the "spokesman at the White House" to Jane Addams-and the rear (editorial) page been liberally...
...majority of regulars will be in the Brown line-up. Of the Crimson team which defeated Princeton 5-0 in the Palmer Stadium, last Saturday, only two players, Eastman and Dunker, will be in the line-up today. Of the Brown team that gave Dartmouth its 14-16 scare a week ago, all but three, Sheldon, Payor and Marshall, will be back in the line-up today...
...should like to congratulate the CRIMSON on its ability to kick up a row in the Boston and New York papers. First there was that dismal affair of "Johnny Harvard", for which the CRIMSON was largely responsible. Now comes this ridiculous Ku Klux scare, which is at present going the rounds of the country's newspapers. Personally I think there is no danger, but if there is, it would be far better not to publish it to the country at large. The CRIMSON should remember that anything about Harvard is good copy for a great many papers, and should...