Word: larger
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...edifices which line the Cambridge banks of the Charles. The Freshman Dormitory System, eminently an expression of the new Harvard, has proved its worth. In thirteen years it has become so integral a part of the University that one wonders whether or not its value is restrictive to a larger Harvard--whether it would not have greatly added to that smaller and more centralized institution whose era preceded it. At any rate it is impossible to conceive of Harvard without this most admirable aid to collegiate orientation. And now another link is added--McKinlock Hall, the formal dedication of which...
...fault is not with journalism and in the larger sense the blame cannot be laid at Washington's door. In Washington an intimate knowledge of government and its many-sided problems can surely be acquired, but--sad to relate--it is not an intimate knowledge that gets most men elected to public office...
...Anti-Saloon League founders, the Rev. Howard Hyde Russell may be isolated as "the Founder." Last week indeed he dedicated a monument commemorating a temperance speech made by Abraham Lincoln in 1846. The monument's inscription contains, in large capitals, the name of Abraham Lincoln, in slightly larger capitals the name of Howard Hyde Russell, described as "Founder of the Anti-Saloon League...
...goals: larger, healthier families; compulsory temperance, not prohibition; continued Italianization of the provinces absorbed from Austria after the War; suppression of the Black Hand and Maffia, which he declared had been virtually accomplished by the new Fastist police; and finally, as the supreme goal: The Corporative State...
...doubt that it can be operated successfully. The charges of $10.50 a week which will probably be established for the new hall if it is built, is the same as that in the Business School at present and should insure the provision of a good, wholesome fare. A considerably larger number of students would undoubtedly agree to eat in the projected hall if special arrangements could be provided for which would free them from the rigorous 21 meals a week requirement. A good many men for instance will probably be unwilling to sign the pledge cards which have been sent...