Word: understood
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...want it understood that I have never said that there was poor material this year. I want it understood that the material this year has been as good, if not better than any I have had since the war. And they'll prove it Saturday...
...entry of the United States into the World Court may be a wise thing and it may help the cause of world peace. But only if the American people have first--not afterwards, but first--made definite stipulations governing their participation in the tribunal and have had these stipulations understood and accepted by the other states...
...monthly conferences which are expected to follow have not yet been definitely arranged. It is understood that they will deal with such concrete problems as absenteeism, fallacies in employment work, labor turnover, employees' mutual benefit plans, fatigue, and psychology of incentives. The dates and speakers will be announced later...
Prolonged chearing followed French's speech, but eventually the cheers turned to calls for a speech from Mike, the "original rooter," who has been assisting in the cheerleading. Mike was finally prevailed upon to speak, and was understood to say that 1929 was a banner class and would do various, emphatic things to Yale. HARVARD 1929 YALE 1929 Burns, l.e. r.e., Bingham Clark, l.t. r.t., Eddy Parkinson, l.g. r.g., Charlesworth Dorman, c. c., Phillips Goodwin, r.g. l.g., Godman Robinson, r.t. l.t., Spiel O'Connell, r.e. l.e., Kline Putnam, q.b. q.b., Miller French, l.h.b. r.h.l., Brandenburg Moore, r.h.b. l.h.b. Garvey Cuaningham...
Professor Richardson of Dartmouth, author of the famed A Study of the Liberal College (TIME, May 4), proposed that "a crisis confronts the American college. . . whose true significance is not always understood. The college is suffering from the results of its own success." He spoke of the schools now growing up around liberal arts nuclei at universities as definitely vocational in character and effective in operation. By comparison, the liberal arts nuclei are of low intellectual tone, their students concealing beneath an assumed pride in a jovial, carefree life, the black despair of an inferiority complex...