Word: understanding
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Dates: during 1950-1950
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...young lady of 18 who wished to devote herself as a Nurse is so very interesting. But have you thought whether 18 is not too young, both physically and morally? There are sacred secrets belonging to the sick which 18 could not and ought not to be able to understand-and there are secrets, the very reverse of sacred, the secrets of vice, about Patients which their Nurse must know if she is not to be made a fool of; and which one shrinks from any young woman, gentle or simple, knowing. (Alas! the 'simple' know them...
Chandler blamed one man above all others for his undoing: St. Louis Lawyer Fred Saigh (rhymes with high), owner since 1949 of the St. Louis Cardinals. "I understand Saigh is going around telling people he put it over," an unhappy Happy told reporters. Owner Saigh had indeed led the fight against Happy ("vindictive" and "hypocritical" were among Saigh's words for him), but Saigh had obviously had allies among the other clubs.* Moreover, the anti-Chandler owners had had an unintentional ally in Happy himself. Four days before the voting, Happy had blabbed to reporters that he thought...
...Miss Small replied that she couldn't, but again asserted, "She did break them." After the meeting, Joan Projansky told the CRIMSON, "Since I have been Publicity Director, Debby has not violated release dates." The next morning, in a private telephone call, Miss Projansky added: "Miss Small doesn't understand the meaning of 'breaking a release.' What she meant was that Debby printed a story before Radcliffe would have wanted it printed...
...publicity two years ago. We decided to publish that list because we felt that our readers were entitled to know which faculty members the sponsors of the list had called "Communists, Communist sympathizers, or fellow travelers." For we felt that only if our readers had this information could they understand the significance of the list and its political use. The CRIMSON felt and still feels that we gave our readers a fair picture of the accuracy of the list by publishing the fact that such persons as the following were identified by it as "Communists, Communist sympathizers, or fellow travelers...
...CRIMSON can well understand how Dean Hall, as Harvard chairman of the drive, had hoped that more publicity would be given the Red Feather; but the CRIMSON could never publicize one charity from the Combined Charities Committee's list of eight more than any of the other seven. It might be legitimate to criticize the CRIMSON for not giving even more publicity than it did to the drive as a whole. It is certainly not legitimate to attack any newspaper for failure to pick out Dean Hall's favorite charity and publicize it more than the others. The CRIMSON agrees...