Word: generously
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1950-1959
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Many universities, not so generous with freedom, hover over student publications, protecting good names and upholding the dignity of official commands. In all but a few instances the result is journalism that amounts to cranking out batches of publicity releases and admonishing readers for their lack of college spirit. Though we are often damned, we doubt whether it is for that...
This has been Buck's policy in admissions, and Dean of Admissions Bender presently is seeking such students, continually drawing on generous scholarship funds. Thus Provost Buck's consistency in following a policy that aids as many as possible starts even before the entering class his entered. Certainly not a naïve idealism, his faith in scholastic latitude perhaps formed first in the southern Ohio town where he remembers seeing one high school classmate working as a Hotel doorman and another directing the local bank. "It is difficult to maintain this valley of democracy," he admits, but the University...
...case, I believe it was true. The scope of the CRIMSON's interests was, is and will continue to be vast. Now, as then, the press is about to break down (only the generous father of G. C. Barclay '19 gave us a now one); new arrangements have to be made with the Printing Company (whether represented by Mac, or Ed, or Walter--all great persons and Yankee traders); ads must be abstained and accounts collected (and we did not have the competition by the radio for adversaries' budgets); a newspaper must be assembled and printed on time...
...PRESIDENCY Change Anything? What with the Christmas spirit and the nostalgia that beset him whenever he thought about leaving the White House, Harry Truman was in a generous and forgiving mood last week...
...poses a perplexing riddle: Is the fetching, half-English, half-Italian widow Rachel (Olivia de Havilland) a murderess who killed her former husband? And is she now slowly doing away with her lover (Richard Burton) by slipping laburnum seeds into his tea? Or is Rachel only misunderstood-a gracious, generous "woman of impulse ... of strong feeling" whose husband died of a hereditary brain tumor? This mystery is slickly served up with all the full flavorings of romance, tragedy, revenge, intrigue and suspense. Bells clang in the distance, the surf beats on the misty Cornish coast, shadows loom in moss-covered...