Word: pilled
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Sullivan had 3,554 votes. He was closely followed by Mayor Joseph A. DiGuglielmo '29. Next were Edward A. Crano '35, Thomas N. MacNamara, Charles A. Watson, Hyman Pill, Marcus Morton, John J. Foley and W. Donnison Swan...
...cannot endorse Hyman Pill nor Andrew Trodden any more than we can endorse such non-CCA incumbents as Edward Sullivan, John Foley and John Lynch. Pill, while not disturbing anyone, has contributed very little to Cambridge civic improvement, while the CCA has never explained why Trodden, a man of no apparent qualifications, deserves backing from either the Association or from Cambridge...
While CCA man Pill has added little to Council meetings in the past year, Independents Foley, Sullivan, and Lynch have detracted much. They have robbed the Council of prestige through their petty personality squabbles, their irresponsible red probe suggestions, and their silly and impractical proposals for student curfews. At great length, these men have discussed the parking inadequacies of Cambridge to reach only the conclusion that students own too many cars...
...aristocrats, the bored billionaires, the Tyrolean songsters with hooked pipes, the tiny donkeys and the hairy mongrels-all these Bemelmans perennials once floated in a dream ballroom and filled the air with a fragrance of old brandy, Russian leather and pine needles. For what Bemelmans calls the cosmopolitan "sleeping-pill set," he created a magical ideal and a high standard of make-believe...
Taft took this bitter pill like a politician of principle. He believed in himself, but believed also in what his party stood for. On Morningside Heights, he and Eisenhower worked out a statement of agreed principles. Taft pledged his allegiance and he never wavered...