Word: ever
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...group of men who so desire may get up a scrub eight and row from Weld. Contrary to the opinion expressed in your columns I might also add that there are now sixty University candidates rowing from the Newell boathouse which to my knowledge is the largest squad ever retained. The cut which sent about twenty men to Weld last week was made later than is the custom. HENRY A. MURRAY...
...needs is "enmasse" enthusiasm. It can well do without an elephantine "frattiness," but it does need friendliness. It does need to avoid that lingering air of decay, and to cultivate the well-ordered, smooth efficiency of the city club. It does need to be homelike. If the institution is ever to escape the spectre of an annual deficit, is ever to attain hearty undergraduate support, its general atmosphere must change...
...date for the first-year law smoker has been set for April 9, and, according to present plans, it will be held in the Harvard Club of Boston. This is the first entertainment of the kind that the first-year men have ever had and the committee is endeavoring to arrange an unusually entertaining program. Original talent from the class together with speeches by Dean Thayer and some of the professors will make up the evening's entertainment. An original double quartet has been gotten together on which are former Glee Club men from six universities...
...same time one of the saddest and yet most encouraging features of the present war is the entire lack of any definite opinion on the part of the masses of the people concerned as to what the causes of the war are or what they as individuals will ever gain. Undoubtedly some mis-educated leaders on both sides have had aggressive desires; all who have come from the warring countries are agreed that to the people it is a war of self-defence...
Military men nowadays are usually self-styled pacifists. They may not disapprove of preparing for peace, but invariably they are found spending all their time preparing for war, forgetting, or, through perfectly justifiable interest in the technique of their profession, ignoring the fact that such ever-increasing preparation is itself the chief cause of all modern wars. Thus, also, just to the extent that they succeed in the purpose for which they were founded, will the Summer Training Camps stifle the university man's belief in the chance for peace now and today. The man who served in an army...