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Word: enough (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
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Usage:

...plans concluded for an extension of the military science course mark a new step in the preparedness schemes of our colleges and the defensive program of the country. A course of training has been laid out that will be rigorous enough to be worthy of its name. That Harvard is the first University to adopt an intensive system of training officers should not be a matter of pride, but rather a basis for the hope that other colleges will establish the same system, and that the foundations of a great citizen army will be laid among our young...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: OUR SERVICE DEFINED | 2/7/1917 | See Source »

Since the crisis with Germany has taken place, the pacifists, headed by Mr. Bryan, have come to the fore, sporting a veritable menagery of peace-doves and soft drinks. I have talked with every advocate of pacifism that I could get close enough to on the street and they all say that, in the President's place, they would have applauded Germany for her latest move and rejoiced that the war was at last on a fair basis. I got several of them to endorse the statement that their lives were more valuable than their honor or their moral welfare...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Life Before Honor? | 2/6/1917 | See Source »

...either case it is not sonorous enough to be self-justifying. Like most undergraduate writers of sonnets, and many older writers, Mr. Allinson is still more or less at the mercy of his form, as the words "all the world is fay" too plainly reveal: unsatisfactory workmanship clogs much of whatever poetic thought the sonnet contains. Mr. Code's sonnet is specific and lively; but it contains a nine-syllabled verse, and an Alexandrine. The latter can scarcely be intentional, since it is not the final verse. The sonnet form is so exacting that it is seriously damaged by stray...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Current Monthly Poetry Number | 2/1/1917 | See Source »

...they are because they are superior to the rest of us whom they control. All armament is purely relative, and we have no way of knowing yet how high the standard of armament will be set in the future. Each European country exhausted by the war, will be glad enough to reduce the scale,--providing only it can be sure al others will agree to do so. Organization against aggression will tremendously reduce the amount of armament required by each nation for protection; and every nation tells the world that it is arming for defense only...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: How Shall We Support Wilson? | 1/30/1917 | See Source »

...appointed a Harvard Endowment Fund Committee to raise ten million dollars. There is little question that both the College proper and the Graduate Schools are in need of additional income. At present the laboratory facilities are far from ideal for best instructing the large classes in physics and chemistry. Enough has been written already about the glaring deficiencies of the Hemenway Gymnasium. Although there are numerous new buildings that are needed at once, the scientific equipment for use in many of the graduate courses is not sufficiently modern to admit the best results in research work...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: TEN MILLION DOLLARS | 1/18/1917 | See Source »

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