Word: hopes
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...directed in another channel. A play of depth, tangibly constructed, is of far more value to the tired mind than such nonsensical entertainment. Even though it is hardly apparent on the surface, the Workshop play is seriously threatening the foundations of those 'unworthy' plays, slowly undermining them, and, I hope, to their speedy collapse...
...thoroughly enjoyed by the men of the Radio School until February 1, not only as a reading room for all the current literature to which the organizations of Phillips Brooks House subscribe, but also as a writing room. Now that its usefulness in this respect is over, we sincerely hope that the Reading Room will continue to be used by men in the University...
After reading these reports we cannot help but feel a renewed interest in and admiration for the ever-growing work carried on by the Phillips Brooks House Association. We print the reports today in the hope that as many members of the University as possible will read them. For to read them is to feel as we do. They are a record of the phenomenal progress and well-deserved success of a work assumed unselfishly and thoroughly well done...
...judged by his two stories, loves the tactual, tells his grim tale well. Mr. Davidson although we early guess half of the denouement of his romance, nevertheless surprises us with the other half, and throughout the whole tale gives joyously vivid pictures of a West, not yet, we hope, wholly departed. His characters are alive, and the wind blows. In Balked Mr. Raffalovich burlesques certain modern fads, but such fads, even in burlesques, are worth neither the expenditure of Mr. Raffalovich's gifts nor the time of the paper maker and the typesetter. Mr. Raffalovich should remember, too, that ever...
...have not yet decided upon a head coach for next fall, but hope to obtain some one who has worked with Mr. Haughton. In 1908, the football coaching system was reorganized and was developed and elaborated by Haughton until formal athletics were cancelled in 1916. We hope to go on with this "Haughton system," and for this reason we are very anxious to secure some man who has either coached or played football under Mr. Haughton. I expect that the usual graduate coaches will be on hand to assist, but we do not yet know of anyone who will...