Word: belonged
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...upon them. If, as seems probable at present, the Weather-man has turned on completely all the spigots on the floor above and gone to sleep leaving them running, the work of the Junior Ushers is tremendously increased. The job of fitting in thirty thousand people where ten thousand belong is never easy, anyway...
...tacit invitation to "free lunch", any more than it pre-supposes personally conducted tours to Agassiz by the hour to show somebody's Aunt Agatha the glass flowers. If means two things: first, attending to visitors' wants; second, keeping from the Yard everybody who does not belong there. Experience in former years proves that fulfilling these requirements is no small responsibility. The work of the Junior Ushers, more than any other single factor, contributes to the "making or breaking...
...intellectual life of the college community is fostered by the monthly meetings of the College Club to which all the college graduates in the community belong. Papers on various fields of research are read by different professors. Professor Dike of the Physics Department spoke on "Telephoning Through Space," Professor Morgan of the Economics Department on "Some Phases of the Problem of Population," and Dr. Post on "Surgery in America Today...
...Such a movement," he continued, "will mean admitting ocean-going vessels into the Great Lakes, and creating 1,450,000 horsepower one-half of which will belong to the United States, and will be available for the industries of New England and New York, all at a cost of about $250,000,000, to be divided between two countries. The other half will belong to Canada, but a large part of Canada's share will be marketed in the United States, because it has, with its present development, a very small additional market for power. Dr. G. O. Smith, director...
...Scrutiny of sources of income, whether furnished by alumni or 'earned' by the student, will mean that no man can play on the teams, can belong to the highest rank of undergraduate aristocracy, unless he is supported by his father or guardian". In such fashion does the New York Times cast doubt upon the wisdom of the "present purging". And although we recognize that such a danger is possible if the purification be carried ad absurdum, the true value of amateur rulings depends not on their phrasing or their explicitness but upon the spirit in which they are enforced...