Word: sentimentally
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...patience of Harvard reached its limit at the Centre game last Saturday. Since then the complaints which have poured in from graduates prove conclusively that it is the unanimous sentiment of Harvard that it is time the hoodlums were dealt with. The presence of a strong anti-Harvard element is bad enough, if tolerable; but when a Harvard man can not go to a game in the company of ladies without hearing on all sides loud and continuous degrees of bawdy talk directed against his own team--it is time then that something be done...
...than this single idea. Our delegates to Princeton, for example, were provided with resolutions framed by the men who were at the Union on Monday evening. Even more important is the fact that Harvard as one of the many institutions in the country is uniting to foster an antiarmament sentiment. Anyone who stayed away from the meeting because be thought that Harvard opinion did not count for much is shutting his eyes to facts. When not only American institutions, but those in England also, are joining together for one purpose, the chances are that their enthusiasm and intelligent attitude towards...
...representatives chosen for the Princeton conference are not yet committed to any policy and are ready to listen to all suggestions. The prevailing sentiment of the meeting tonight will to a considerable extent determine Harvard's attitude at the conference on Wednesday...
...speeches this evening deal with the latter question more than with the general aspect of disarmament, in order that the delegates, Melville P. Baker '22 and William Whitman 3d '22, who have been appointed to represent the University at Princeton may be the better able to judge of the sentiment of the undergraduate body...
...Union leaders are too astute politicians to call a strike on account of the 12 percent wage reduction that went into effect last July by order of the Labor Board, for in doing so the railroad unions would not only antagonize the government, but would turn entire public sentiment against them, everybody realizing that the 12 percent from the high wages established during the war was a very small reduction. Second, because railroad employees cannot, under the law, strike on a mere suggestion of a further wage reduction. Third, the railroads themselves cannot reduce wages before first proposing same...