Word: enjoyed
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...that field. In selecting his courses, the prospective concentrator is faced with the choice of the lesser of two evils--a mediocre course or a very bad one. Exceptions do not excuse the general inadequacy. Possibly in some of those he chooses he may be lucky enough to enjoy the benefits of competent instruction. But if he has any interest in tutorial, he will have to keep that alive himself, for nothing beyond the bare necessities will be supplied him. Often the accretion of even that vital knowledge will be the result of his own labors in Widener...
...opening performance at the Fine Arts Theatre on Wednesday night of "Ecstasy," the much talked-of Czechoslovakian motion picture, this department is quite puzzled over the storm of moralistic indignation which the film has aroused. Produced several years ago and presented frequently in Europe, it has yet to enjoy a regular run in America and it is assumed that the inhibiting factor has been fear of censorship. So intriguing was the delectable advance whisper that the opening night attracted a large and urgent through, forcing the management to give an extra performance to satisfy the demands of an art-seeking...
...Alfred Richard Orage of the New English Weekly have at one time or another espoused. At Fontainebleau, where Miss Mansfield died in 1924, Gurdjieff ran the Institute for the Harmonious Development of Man. He taught his followers intricate dances for which he composed 5,000 pieces of music. He enjoyed mirth, appeared to enjoy heroic rages, advocated intense awareness of every muscular function. Six years ago Gurdjieff arrived in Manhattan, was often to be seen in Childs' restaurants drinking coffee and working over a monumental book, Tales Told by Beelzebub to His Grandson (TIME, March...
...entry, and four others in an entry across the quadrangle. Many of their best friends will be in another House, totally segregated from their former associates. This unfortunate policy has resulted in mass migrations of social groups out of the Houses into rooms where they can enjoy the society of one another without interference from the college...
...cannot but feel, however, that the "Association of Gold Star Mothers" got the dirty end of that Princeton stick. They get shipped to Europe "to view the green fields where their sons shall some day lie" while we stay home and enjoy our boni at Savin Rock. Inasmuch as Mr. Brisbane assures us that the next war will be a Japanese invasion, we see no reason why the Vassar heroines cannot get "teary around the eyes" looking at the green fields adjacent to New Haven...