Word: eagerly
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...Field and the Business School are a long way from the Yard, yet many commuters would prefer a routine 10-minute walk to the current matutinal scramble for places to park nearer their classes. Students living in the Houses or the Yard, on the other hand, should be particularly eager for a legal and dependable parking lot even at some distance, since they rely on their cars less for daily than for weekend travel. Whether run by the University or by a student group, an essential prerequisite for any such space is 24-hours-a-day supervision for which provision...
...finds the American Liberal a man without a party, but not a man without hope. By 1948 post-war escapism may have run its course. When the nation has "had enough" platitudinous political ponderosity and the public voices a plea for effective, progressive leadership, the Democratic Party will be eager to follow the program of its liberal membership...
From this center of operations he sallies forth to lecture rooms, crowded with students eager to make the most of their chance to absorb some of the wisdom of the man who has been called the foremost legal philosopher in the world. The green eye shade which Professor Pound wears in the classroom has become a Harvard tradition, as have the anecdotes with which he spices his lectures...
...ears of Harvardian philistines, but the plan is to meet at Lowell B-11 Thursday night anyway in the hopes that somebody will crash through. Prospective hot artists should not stay away because of fears of getting involved in a time consuming project. This is not an association of eager beavers or of people who consider themselves well enough off to spare more than a couple of hours a week...
...Albert was on hand to welcome the bejeweled and tail-coated guests: Princess Faiza of Egypt, Couturier Jacques Fath, Cartoonist Roger Wild, Mlle. Constantinesco, Fred McEvoy, Mme. Audemars and a safari of minor movie officials, businessmen and actresses. Gallantly, the sprinkle of oldtimers and pleasure's eager neophytes strove to revive the tradition of flaunting frivolity. But something more was missing than Gérard, who had retired to a sumptuous château near Biarritz which he had bought with tips. The world had changed; even Paris had changed. And one must be so careful these days; Maxim...