Word: cannot
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...learned the great difference between being worked and working--that the former is degradation, the latter civilization. This change of spirit in regard to labor is one of the greatest evidences of his progress. Moreover, by learning how to farm, cook, make bricks and so on, the students cannot help but get to understand the earnestness and soberness of life, and after graduation go out to spread these ideas among the mass of people, whose chief obstacle to progress is lack of experience...
...center on a shift play and runs to Harvard's 50-yard line. Philbin and Camp fail to gain and Howe tries to punt. The ball goes to Harvard, however, as the ball does not go 20 yards. Felton punts to Howe on Yale's 40-yard line. Philbin cannot gain by rushing and Howe attempts a forward pass to Avery, which goes wrong...
...make it successful. Its thought has long been forcing a way into publication by various channels. Separate endowments enable books in the various branches of scholarship to be published by commercial houses. The University itself, however, can not handle what rightly belongs to it, and with its equipment cannot aspire higher than to the publication of registers and catalogues. To establish a press that would publish all that expression of the University which now seeks other channels, and to publish also the many other theses, reports and books that deserve publication, calls for a press that would cost...
...week. Many experts predict that this will be the case, as the earlier games showed a great deal of latent power in the squad. On the other hand, Dartmouth comes to Cambridge backed by 1500 supporters and a record far better than the University team can show. Dartmouth men cannot be blamed for believing that a team which evidently played far better hall against Princeton than did Harvard, especially in the line where Harvard was the weakest, will have an even chance against the Harvard team. Thus it can be seen that in every way Harvard will have to exert...
...Kelley said that the problem of poverty cannot be solved from above. The attempts of women to obtain even humane working laws are met with the arguments that such laws are unconstitutional. The judges admit that conditions in factories today are absolutely cruel, yet they say that women, with a few minor limitations, are citizens, and consequently cannot be deprived of their property rights...