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Word: happener (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Somehow we knew that if ever Mother Advocate dared to scratch her head, things would happen. Mother Advocate scratched her head...

Author: By Joseph LEITER ., (SPECIAL ARTICLE FOR THE CRIMSON) | Title: OUR OLD MOTHER ADVOCATE SCRATCHES HER GRAY HEAD | 12/17/1920 | See Source »

Please stop playing favorites with nations because their governments happen to displease you; remember that history is not a bad thing, but something organic, alive, and in the making; and pay at least as much attention to the true history of today as to the facts of the past. EDWARD M. RUBIN '22. October...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: An Irritated Reader | 10/13/1920 | See Source »

Frequently at football games incidents happen similar to the incident in the last half of Saturday's game, where some player does a thing which if seen by the officials would call for a penalty, and which is seen by large numbers of the audience as evidenced by their audible protest...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: A Move for Fair Play | 9/29/1920 | See Source »

...CRIMSON a few days ago surmised would happen a "comparatively unheralded candidate" emerged victorious from the welter of the convention. In retrospect it is easy to see how carefully the "coup" was planned, how the popular favorites were played off against each other to the point of exhaustion, how the well-coached dark horse was jockeyed into position in the intermediate ballots, and how he broke away for an overwhelming victory at the finish. The results of the convention reveal not only the inefficiency of the popular primaries, but also the total inefficiency of popular sentiment in affecting...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE REPUBLICAN TICKET | 6/14/1920 | See Source »

...title of Hugo and Humanist, into two pages of frivolous conversation; and "Billet Ballads No. 4," by J. F. Leys, '22, is a mixture of Kipling's early Indian manner with the pseudo-English of the Saturday Evening Post. One serious flaw is common 'to' both these versious. Nothing happens in them; nothing even seems to happen.- Whereas Kippling had the gift of making his pages appear riotons, although both thought and event were often totally absent...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: ADVOCATE REVIEWED | 5/28/1920 | See Source »

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