Word: superiors
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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With the wind playing the biggest part in the game, championship hopes of the Harvard Varsity soccer team were blown away last Saturday in a 1 to 1 deadlock with Brown. Although the play of the Crimson appeared superior to that of Brown, they were prevented by the gale from sinking more than one shot in the not, which G.F. Stork '33, left inside, accounted...
...intelligence, are the men who are least interested in them. There would be no place in American politics for the "ward-heelers" and the Vares and the Thompsons if the college men, both undergraduates and graduates, would shoulder the burden of responsibility which becomes theirs when they receive advantages superior to those of the majority of the population...
...bureau. Actually his removal had been expected ever since he disagreed with Attorney General Mitchell's statement that a large percentage of criminals infested the B. E. F. Appointed to fill his place was Inspector Ernest W. Brown. 38 years on Washington's police force. His retiring superior felicitated him, hoped he would serve out the five years left before his retirement. General Glassford had served eleven months...
...most cases, the classics form the basis of modern European methods of education. This influence of the classics, moreover, does broaden the "cultural interests to some extent. But in the matters of practical knowledge and general accumulation of facts the American student is easily the equal, if not the superior, of his European contemporary. The varied and diversified program demanded in American colleges is partly responsible for this. As regards university presidents being noisy personages rather than academic aides, Mr. Flexner has again generalized from a few cases in recent years which have gained publicity. How noisy they...
...auspices of the Menorah Society during the year, are: H. A. Wolfson '12, Nathan Littauer, Professor of Jewish Literature and Philosophy; Dr. Arnold Margolin, former justice of the Supreme Court of the Ukraine; Hyman Morrison '05, professor in the Tufts Medical School; Lewis Goldberg '11, justice of the Massachusetts Superior Court; Kirsopp Lake, professor of Church History; Stephen S. Wise, Rabbi of the New York Free Synagogue; Eustace Hayden, professor at the University of Chicago; and Lion Feuchtwanger, famous German novelist...