Word: knows
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...this very situation which the University Teas go far toward remedying. The chance to meet members of the Faculty, to come to know them off the lecture platform, is one which we cannot afford to neglect. It is a privilege which in after years we should be sorry to have missed. Let us, then, take full advantage of this opportunity to become better acquainted with some of the men who make Harvard University what...
...enter into the songs as though they wanted the opposite stands to hear them, and should strive by attention to the leader to begin on the proper note and to enunciate the words clearly so that those on the other side of the field will not only hear, but know, what they are singing. With the Yale game so near at hand, whatever opportunities that are offered for practice, should be readily embraced. Tonight, at the mass meeting, the songs will be practiced carefully, and a shabby attendance means that the singing at New Haven Saturday will be as listless...
...Union, where there is no "Living Room" and consequently the most frequented rooms are those in which silence is enforced either by rule or by custom. On the other hand, a man who takes part in the weekly debates, and stands for committees and offices, comes to know hundreds of men from all elements in the university. The debating hall and the committee room of the Union are the places where friendships are started. For men who have a common interest, the library, reading rooms, and other facilities give the opportunity for further association...
Princeton, after the first half, seemed to be at a loss to know just what to do, though in the first periods, her work had been confident and sensational. Her only score was made from the use of beautifully executed forward passes, two of them for 30 yards each being enough to score a touchdown. The versatility of her attack was in marked contrast to Harvard's faith in simpler plays of an ordinary sort...
...alone it would be worth while for undergraduates to read the issue. There is also what seems to me a typical utterance of the stand-patter,--a graceful statement of well worn and out worn Republican platitudes by ex-Governor Long. There is also, just why one does not know, in this otherwise admirably serious and pertinent number a lurid word collection from the pen of Mr. Thomas W. Lawson, chiefly sound and fury signifying nothing. Ferhaps the article is offered as material for instructors in English A, who may utilize it to show those who would write English...