Word: available
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1900-1909
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...rooms in the Senior dormitories, Hollis, Holworthy, and Stoughton. Probably most of the men who will take advantage of the Senior privilege have already made up their minds to do so, but to those who are still in doubt a few words of advice may still be of some avail...
Dissatisfaction, however evident, will be of no avail unless its effect appears in the plans for another season. As a rule the captain appoints the coach, and, although he may attempt to follow a certain policy, his choice will necessarily have in view the success of his own team or his personal inclinations. We should do well to secure one of the best graduate players of each season to coach the next team, but the choice of both head coach and field coach should not lie entirely with the captain. A suggestion which we print in another column...
Will you permiit me to reiterate the advice, given by Professor Francke in yesterday's CRIMSON, that students who care either for the German language or for German art should avail themselves of the courses of Professor Clemen? To hear the best German spoken with the authority of a famous scholar is the best possible discipline one may have in this country, both in language and in the history of art. I do not urge a balance of public courtesies for we cannot offer official hospitality on the scale which a centralized government has at its command; but I trust...
...deep in the mire, weary from lost battles on the ice, the track, and the diamond. Far off in Cambridge only the fame of the CRIMSON is heard. The score was 16 to 14. All Lampy's bombs, jeers, kicks, jokes (?), beer, cheers, and bean blowers were of no avail before the cool experts of the pride of American journalism. Nothing could overtax the nerve of the men who had braved the terrors of Memorial Hall's fishballs. Small fry from the streets cheered for their witty brothers, drank with them, blew beans for them, fired dreadful paper salutes...
...American politics by moaning over the degeneracy of the times, instead of trying to better them, by railing at the men who do the actual work of political life, instead of trying himself to do the work, is a poor creature, and, so far as his feeble powers avail, is a damage and not a help to the community. You may come far short of this disagreeable standard and still be a rather useless member of society. Your education, your cultivation, will not help you if you make the mistake of thinking that is a substitute for instead...