Word: liking
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Every first-year student in the Dental School is required to pay to the Bursar before 5 P. M. today $147 for fees and deposits; each second and third- year student is required to pay, in like manner, $100; each student entering any subsequent year is required to pay, in like manner...
Every first-year student in the Dental School is required to pay to the Bursar before 5 P. M. tomorrow $147 for fees and deposits; each second and third-year student is required to pay, in like manner, $100; each student entering any subsequent year is required to pay, in like manner...
Every first-year student in the Medical School is required to pay to the Bursar before 5 P. M. tomorrow $154 for fees and deposits; each second-year student is required to pay, in like manner, $128; and all other students are required to pay, in like manner...
...Broken Mirror," last of a series of stories of Mme. Saumon's pension on Eliot street, is too obvious in plot and only near-English in style. The tone suggested by the first line, "Dulling their background like two pearls in a cabbage patch," is fortunately not maintained throughout. A sketch, Mr. Skinner's Indian tale "The Love of a Friend," is simple and good. Perhaps the Apache saying which heads it--"Any man can slay an enemy, but only an Apache is brave enough to kill a friend"--anticipates too much the conclusion...
...invalidated even the sanest statements which follow. Nothing is to be gamed by proclaiming a lovable minor bard as the valiant champion in a poetic reformation. The study of "H. G. Wells and the Socialist Aristocracy" is clear, concise, and in all respects convincing, if only we assume--like the writer--that the peculiar brand of socialism which Wells has adopted for literary purposes is really to be reckoned with as propaganda. Wells's "New Machiavelli," which Mr. Henderson is using for his text in this study, seems hardly to merit such earnest criticism...