Word: flocks
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
After a while, Ye Yun Ho, 28, came to live at the dump. Like many members of his new "parish" he found himself a packing case and moved in, sharing his food with those who were worse off. On Sundays he gathered his flock together on the flats for simple services, and when the autumn winds blew cold, he began to build a church...
...look now but Harvard may have a sprinter. Anyway, that's the way it appeared in the K. of C. meet at the Garden Saturday night when stocky John Spivak fought his way into the final of the 50-yard dash against a whole flock of name runners...
...final agreement is the extent of Union ticket sales and advertising on any weekend when both organizations will plan dances. The inter-House Committee balks at the suggestion that the Union may publicize its dance in the visiting college on these conflicting dates. Fearing that the visitors will flock to the lower-priced dance, the inter-House Committee wants Union huckstering strictly limited to the Yard...
...time of the poll showing overwhelming support in Cambridge for a Student Activities Center. Augustus Thorndike '19, who insisted for personal reasons that his vote be technically considered for the Medical Center, actually favors the plaque-scholarship combination and has stated that he will go along with the flock on the next tally. The vote of Representative John F. Kennedy '40, seriously ill, is not known...
Very few Germans have any real remorse for 1939-45. "That was war," they say, and wave a hand to dismiss even the atrocities. They flock to Berchtesgaden by the thousand for pilgrimage climbs over Hitler's favorite mountain. You meet them even on the slopes-marked Verboten to Germans-around his chalet and eagle's nest eyrie. They turn stony faces to foreigners on the mountain as though the latter's mere presence on the sacred soil were sacrilege...