Search Details

Word: good (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
Sort By: most recent first (reverse)


Usage:

...University cross-country team decisively defeated Technology over the six mile Belmont course Saturday afternoon, the score being 32 to 93. Five University men crossed the finish line before any of the opponents completed the course. G. A. King '18 won in very good time, with the next four men bunched well together...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: CROSS-COUNTRY TEAM WON INITIAL MEET OF SEASON | 10/30/1916 | See Source »

...five passes and intercepted two of the Ithacans' few tries, while Cornell was unable to complete a single toss and intercepted but one of the University's passes. The type of play used so successfully against the University by Tufts was turned to the advantage of the Crimson with good result...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: CORNELLIANS FORCED TO ACCEPT REVENGE | 10/30/1916 | See Source »

...London Spectator, in an editorial entitled "De Minimus," says: "It is good for every man's character that there should be some spiritual region in which he can do as he likes, some land of little things where he may be delivered from the tyranny of the long arm." This reflection may invite more appreciation in England, where tradition and time-honored custom have established a political and social inertia reasonably impervious to radical pressure, than in America, whose institutions are not similarly encrusted. However, herein lies a possible indication of our own proneness to talk and act nonsensically. College...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: "THE LAND OF NONSENSE" | 10/30/1916 | See Source »

That Hughes advocates in the University are urging "every subject on earth" but the question of a high protective tariff might well go back to 1896, and the good old days of high tariff and low. If Mr. Lazarus seriously believes that the "sole visible and apparently eternal" question of a high tariff is the only one with which the community is concerned in the present campaign, then it were far better for him to take up his political primer, his newspaper or his train of common sense, and learn what confronts the country. Let us hope that there...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: University's Attitude Defended. | 10/28/1916 | See Source »

Professor Ripley recently gave good advice when he urged men to attend the Sunday labor meetings in Faneuil Hall. College students are at the time of life when they need to become acquainted with every sort of problem in a broad, humanitarian way, without the prejudice of later years. Not only the problems of labor, but the financial, religious and diplomatic interest of the world need a first hand exploration which cannot be obtained inside the walls of a college...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE DAY OF REST | 10/28/1916 | See Source »

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