Word: liking
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...special battery, three speeds reversible and left-hand control, will start with Wentworth on the mound and Herter at the receiving end. Wentworth, who has been in special training for the past month, is known, to be a speedy pitcher, and McGraw, of the Giants, says there is nobody like him. The captain of the Kappas refused up to a late hour last night to make known his final choice for today's slab artist; but it is rumored that there is a dark horse not mentioned in the line-up. The teams will approach the plate as follows...
...does not want it; certainly none of the Mexican leaders can want it, and when no one in authority wants war there ought to be wisdom enough among the statesmen to avoid it. The President has accepted the good offices of the great South American states. They would not like to see Mexico occupied by our troops, and they will spare no effort to secure terms which the United States can honorably accept...
...Harvard men who would like to sing in a chorus which will lead in the musical program in Tremont Temple on Saturday, May 2, are requested to report for the only rehearsal at the Woman's Suffrage Hall, 587 Boylston street, Boston. The rehearsal will be held on Wednesday afternoon, April 29, at 5 o'clock. The music will will be under the direction of Dr. A. T. Davison...
Hitherto, its purpose, like the purpose of many of the more recently founded American schools, has been to furnish a broad general knowledge of silviculture and the management of forests. Since the need for intensive operation of forests is less pressing in America than in England, the demands have been more and more for specialists in either the business or the technical, scientific aspects of lumbering. By the present plans, joining one division of the School with the Business School and the other with the Bussey Institute and Arnold Arboretum, these demands are recognized, and the interests of forest conservation...
Pools, which Professor Durand defined as agreements in the scale of prices and other commercial regulations between two or more corporations, are, like the Trusts, worthy of serious thought. Although, by reason of their loose organization, they are less able to maintain monopolies and other unfair competitive methods, experience shows that the public, as a rule, has been forced to pay excessive prices for those articles on which the pools have operated...