Word: heard
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1929
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...special Sunday morning concert at the California Theatre. L. H. Behymer, Maestro-Impresario of the Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra, and probably the greatest musical manager of the Pacific Coast, recommends the Club as follows: "Stanford's Glee Club is the best of its class I have ever heard in my musical career...
...have myself been through the ordeal of receiving a degree in Sanders Theatre, and have heard from a goodly number of others their complaints concerning the exercises as conducted there. The general feeling seems to be that of dissatisfaction. This is caused by certain conditions imposed by the nature of the building. These conditions are, first, that each one receiving a degree may have but one ticket for guests, and secondly, that the atmosphere is usually suffocatingly hot and close. In my own case the ceremony was one of constant physical discomfort, relieved only by the thought that...
...have heard but two objections to the use of the Stadium. The first of these is the uncertainty of the weather. This condition was met, in the case mentioned, by issuing with every four or five tickets to the Stadium one ticket to Sanders Theatre, so that the exercises might be held there in case of inclemency, the chosen few attending. In the second place, I have heard one report that there was difficulty in hearing. As I remember. I sat on the farthest edge of the audience, yet had no difficulty in this regard. Since this objection...
...sure C" attitude. In a word, the Sophomore begins to grow up. He considers himself a man. For, in truth, the youth of twenty feels as old as he thinks he ever will. In this "maturity" the mind's balancing scale weighs heavily toward business, toward--as we have heard many undergraduates say--"life...
...Sophomore who thus finds a university career not worth continuing, it would be well to consider carefully both sides of the question. His older friends, now in business, will tell him what he has heard countless times, namely, "to stick!" This brings only a yawn from the tired college man. For the student feels that his case is different. He is young in years and, because he is young knows everything. If he disregards this advice, realization must come sooner or later that he is a quitter. He entered college for the fundamental purpose of getting a degree...