Word: age-old
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...jazz alligators to Hollywood glamour-boys. The No. 1 motif, which is Martha Pittenger's "A Man From The Band," concentrates on the Eastern seaboard, and, in particular, on a toney New York apartment where American-Rich-Girl-Number-Four marries a piano player and tries to reconcile the age-old differences between their opposing ways of life...
Russia's other Balkan object is age-old: an exit from the Black Sea. Russia's only other outlets to the world are through Vladivostok, the Baltic and the Arctic Ocean. The U. S. would be in a similar position if its only outlets to the world were through Alaska, Hudson Bay, Newfoundland, and the mouth of the Mississippi, which was held by a foreign power (the Turks). Since the 18th Century the Russians have hankered to possess the Bosporus and Dardanelles. When they tried to get them in 1854 the British, the French and later the Italians...
...solution to this age-old problem is a set of prepared maps containing all the requirements for the present year. These are in no way connected with tutoring notes and are sold just as books or any other items connected with a college course...
Cheering spectators will line the banks of the Thames river at New London today, as another of the age-old rowing contests with Yale gets under way. The two-day regatta starts with the combination race this afternoon, and continues tomorrow with the Freshman, Jayvee, and Varsity encounters...
Recent blasts from the "Daily Princetonian" show that its new board of editor is adopting a more wide-awake attitude toward age-old problems down at Nassau. First came a body blow at a snobbish and impractical club system, and along with it an appeal for a House Plan like Harvard's and Yale's. The late President Wilson gave the college a chance for such an arrangement years ago, but Princetonian sentiment quickly smothered the whole idea...