Word: attracted
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...Noyes, the English poet, who has made so successful a tour of the country, has chosen a subject for his address this evening which will attract hundreds of people. The war scares that periodically pervade the nations have many interesting phases, and to Mr. Noyes not the least interesting is their needlessness. But if "Militarism" does not invite you, then the assertion that Mr. Noyes's poetry has a spirit and movement which come from a story well-told is sure to draw you to his reading. As one of our professors has rightly remarked, he is among...
Harvard has always been well represented at Northfield, and this year's Conference should attract a larger and more enthusiastic delegation than over before...
Thoroughly as this number of the Illustrated covers the gymnasium problem, the reviewer doubts if it will attract the flippant undergraduate, or, for that matter the flippant graduate. Its illustrations are mostly unflattering snap-shots of the ugliest Harvard buildings. Altogether, the Illustrated suffers from over-specialization in photographs and expository articles. Its editors need illustrators, story-writers, verse-makers, whose work may set off articles like those of Dr. Williams and Mr. Parsons; and they ought to realize that pictures of Compressibility Machines, Seismographs, and Boylston Hall cannot liven any magazine which aims to be more spirited than...
...changes in the customs of the University have necessitated a change in the methods of financing the debating team; and the struggle for existence has been a hard one. Nevertheless, the team has fought with determination against all difficulties, and we hope that the timely and interesting subject will attract a large and appreciative audience...
...rare profundity and eloquence. Those who attended the previous Noble Lecture or who have listened to Bishop Royd-Carpenter in Chapel have been impressed by the depth of his learning and his great human understanding. Aside from the appeal of his personality, the subject of his lecture, Dante, should attract men interested in literature and philosophy...