Word: successful
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...yesterday's editorial it was suggested that the H. A. A. lacked undergraduate support, that if it wished its coffers full again, it must take action. There have been a number of attempts to capture student interest, not one of which can be described as a dazzling success. There is, for instance, a Minor Sports Council, comprised of minor sports captains and managers. It met once this year, once last year, and failed to meet the year before. There is an undergraduate athletic committee, a merger of major and minor sports, organized last fall. The results of its first meeting...
Satisfied with the present and looking forward to the future optimistically, Timothy Fuller, 23 year old former Crimson undergraduate and the author of "Harvard Has A Homicide" related yesterday the success of his novel and plans for his next works...
...refused, he enlisted the aid of her friends Korman and Vallee (Yale '27) and with them engaged Heloise in a long-drawn argument. "Look at Katharine Hepburn," said Photographer Korman, "there was a girl with no looks but a college education and hasn't she made a success of herself?" Mr. Vallee assured her that a college education was an advantage in any profession. The result was that Heloise agreed to go back to Drake as a junior last autumn. At the station she broke down and wept...
...Mustered out of the U. S. Army in Panama, Skid Johnson (Fred MacMurray) is not much better than a guttersnipe when he meets Maggie King (Carole Lombard), a stranded dancer working as a manicurist. Things begin to improve when he and Maggie team in an act, celebrate its sensational success by marriage, improve even further when a Broadway scout (Charles Arnt) offers Skid a contract. In New York, Skid behaves badly. He not only neglects to send Maggie, waiting in Panama, the fare to follow him, but also takes up with a night club jade (Dorothy Lamour), in whose room...
...Since selection of mate is to a large extent something influenced by emotions, there must be many students whose marriages are not greatly directed by their course in marriage. On the other hand, the information they gather helps them make of their marriage a success. I have been driven to the belief that most men and women not only mate sincerely but with a large measure of promise...