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Word: suggesters (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1929
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Usage:

...should like to suggest that in the late games of the season, especially the Princeton and Yale games the cheer-leaders spread out so as to include everyone on the Harvard side of the field. Very nearly all the people on the Harvard side want to yell and sing for the team but are excluded by the grouping of cheer-leaders in front of the cheering section. If thirty thousand people are cheering for the team on Saturday instead of one section I think it would be a great help and would please every Harvard graduate present. ASA B. DAVIS...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Communication | 11/23/1922 | See Source »

...intention of doing. In the first place, Major Moore's services to the University are too well-known and appreciated by Harvard men to leave any desire for an attack. In the second place, a contest in Billingsgate such as the author of the communication seems to suggest, with the Athletic Association on one side, knowing its own methods from A to Z, and on the other side the CRIMSON, admittedly with a layman's point of view, would be unproductive of anything but ill-feeling...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: "FLAT-FOOTED" | 11/20/1922 | See Source »

...that vast group of college students who love books because books can be friends. But you ought to notice editorially that smaller groups of college students who entertain no such love, cherish no such fondness, for the sanctum of books. In the endeavor to please that smaller group, I suggest the following...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Library Liberty | 11/13/1922 | See Source »

...they are spoiled, ruined to the core, every one of them. Ruined by a cloying insatiable, pathological subjectivity. It is ghoulish and does not suggest the human, even the eccentric. And even Mr. Lawrence's ticket takers, and farmers and young country girls, are all of them stark mad, mad in an unpleasant rasping way. All of his characters have un-natural lights in their eyes, and their brains are pounding with agonies of an existence which they do not understand. All of this is cleverly written and may be what Mr. Lawrence is after...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE CRIMSON BOOKSHELF REVIEWS | 11/11/1922 | See Source »

...general course" has been suggested vaguely as the remedy that would meet these requirements. We would suggest, however, two courses instead of one--these to be offered and received as "primarily for distribution". The reason for such division would be that for cultural purposes science naturally divides itself into two fairly definite fields; the dealing with the structure of matter, and the second with evolution. "Science 1" and "Science 2" would deal with these two fields...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: SCIENCE FOR THE LAYMAN | 11/6/1922 | See Source »

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