Word: enough
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...conclusion follows quickly enough: Since there exist wide differences in opinion between men with identical interests as to what those interests are and how they may be best protected, unless we deny intelligence to women we must accept it as inevitable that there may exist the same differences of opinion between men and women,--between father and daughter, husband and wife, brother and sister. And unless we wish to contend further that women's opinions are inferior to men's we cannot but conclude that to confer the expression of opinion by the ballot exclusively upon the male...
...date scarcely 200 men, of which less than 40 are Freshmen, have signed up for the Princeton trip. Unless 300 sign up before Friday, the reduced rate of $7.75 will have to be abandoned. The committee has secured a rate low enough to warrant a good cheering section at Princeton, and thus far the response is discouraging. The importance of a cheering section need not be emphasized. In 1911, the football team played in Princeton, and the defeat is attributed to the fact that there was no Harvard undergraduate support. In 1913 the result of undergraduate support was manifested...
...Richard Henry Dana as a Man of Letters." "The popular impression of Richard Henry Dana is that he was a man of one book, 'Two Years Before the Mast.' Such impressions are not always infallible, and yet the offhand, instinctive judgment upon which they rest is usually right enough for all practical purposes. In Dana's case the popular verdict is not likely to be reversed. It is one of the ironies of literature that this son of a poet, inheriting so much that was finest in the old New England culture, a pupil of Emerson, trained at Harvard, toiling...
...enough men to form three teams are not reporting regularly by the end of this week, the series will not be played, and one team, the Invincibles, will arrange a series of games with outside teams...
...have been more or less discarding representative government for a system of direct legislation, nomination and election. It is too soon to tell how the system works. The people can send the right man if they want to take the trouble: but as a rule they do not take enough interest, and let the choice fall into the hands of "the machine." The people say they want direct legislation, but if they will send a good man to the legislature, representative legislature is best...