Word: oared
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Dates: during 1970-1970
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Getting an Oar...
...will deny that, as Mr. Stowe says in your article "Stowing the Manly Oar" [Nov. 23], the world is not what it was when he was an undergraduate. There are abuses throughout our society, and the students are bellwethers. If one listens to them, one realizes how miserable they are and how desperately they want to be a part of an America that lives up to the principles upon which it was founded. Columbia students are too intelligent to accept a haircut and a hard hat as the salvation of our country...
POLYTECHNIC INSTITUTE OF BROOKLYN Walter P. Reuther, LL.D., late president of the United Auto Workers. No speaker for those who toil in oar midst can replace him, for he was that rare human individual: a man who cares enough to make change not only possible but real...
...turmoil of the dilating implications of things, a receptivity which may be inspirational or insinuative. Arkadina is steady and caustic, overbearing in her rationality, but qualified by patronization. Perhaps she senses that the people around are children, but she is unable to go beyond that. Sorin, oar and infirm, feels he has lost out on life and is probably right. He hates to be contradicted by Yevgheniy, a doctor (the only one who likes Konstantin's play), when he says he is miserable. Nina wants to marry the famous writer. The old man, Sorin, has unconscious spells, and the young...
Although the start was heavily staggered, it was apparent that Harvard had a sizeable lead after the first twenty strokes. "Our start was beautiful." said senior Ed Porter who mans the number four oar. "After our start, it wasn't a tense race...