Word: nay
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1929
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Young Women, He Asserts, Do Not Object to Meeting 'Woozy' Students." So ran the bold headline on the front page of the New York Times. Here President Eliot's attack is divided into two parts,--against the students for misbehaving and against so-called "good society" for countenancing, nay, even abetting the students' actions. But why pick on this one university, and why pick out the matrons and young women of this community of all places? Boston is Boston. If the undergraduates are "woozy" here, think what we would be were Harvard nearer New York or Philadelphia. Some few people...
...much on D'Annunzio before the war. The facts of his vile existence are there, if anyone wants them. Any number of travellers in Italy will testify to that. Yet, it is almost as bad to believe what insidious press dispatches have to say on this Italian, nay, international outlaw. And so is the intelligent public, as usual, caught between two fires...
...Ellis, W. B. Darling, P. E. Jones, W. T. Salter; 132--F. Hadley Gibson; 133--E. K. Newburger, R. J. Levy; 41--H. H. Jackson, Jr.; 42--T. R. Olive, C. K. Lawrence; 44--K. Buchanan, W. A. Jesson; 46--P. R. Brown, R. H. Nay, N. K. Richtmyer; 47--E. R. Habicht, G. C. A. Fetzer; 141--G. G. Folin, R. K. Thompson, L. B. Young; 142--M. P. Lichauco; 143--O. H. Emerson, P. R. Harmal, M. Weisbuch; 144--P. Mendoza, Jr., H. J. Williams...
...Senate of its proper sphere of operations. By rejecting the League of Nations, the Senate announced its intention to stay at home and mind nobody's business but its own. Surely such an announcement is somewhat inconsistent with the Irish resolution, whereby the same Senate plunges its finger, nay, its whole fist into the international pie, and extends a wholly gratuitous insult to a friendly nation. Great Britain is fully as anxious to get rid of the Irish question as the Irish are to get rid of Great Britain. Some day may see the matter adjusted; but that day will...
Among all the unique things about Harvard worthy of her name is the famous system of Division Examinations, the first thing of its kind in the history of American college education. That it is an invaluable adjunct to the college curriculum proper, no conscientious person will quarrel over; nay, not even the fortunate or unfortunate Seniors who bear the full brunt of the burden. With it, a student will plough deeper into the field of his particular major study and will gain a correspondingly broadened perspective of the realm of related knowledge. Without it, he will be ground with...