Word: scatteredness
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In the small, narrow, and low-studded room, the greater part of which is taken up by the huge editorial table, and the cumbersome stove, are gathered about a dozen men, lolling in the window-seats, seated upon the paper-box or around the table. On the table is a...
In the Spring, Rudy Vallee offered to "do for 'Fair Harvard' what he has done for the Maine 'Stein Song'," and Harvard officials politely declined. Guy Lombardo dedicated his network radio program to Harvard; The Crimson reviewed the new Advocate, and a headline proclaimed "Both of Agee's Contributions Draw...
WITH THAT PRONOUNCEMENT The Crimson launched its coverage of the 1960 campaign. Since 1917, Crimson editors had scattered through the country every fourth year, covering conventions, primaries, trends and candidates. The politics of the paper had shifted from conservative to liberal in the space of a few decades, and no...
Whatever the reasons for the decision, the action did not seem to be a disciplinary one. The Manhattan version of Woodstock was admittedly a haven for many and varied lifestyles. The residences, scattered along 1½ miles of the Upper West Side, housed the studious here, the activists there. Beards...
THE much-discussed U.S. energy crisis often tends to sound like a fairly distant event that may well be avoided by wise planning and careful allocation of resources. But last week the crisis became all too real. In scattered sections of the nation there were cold schools, unfilled jet-aircraft...