Word: never
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...play, "The Guest of Honor." It is a comedy romance of New York life in three acts. So consistently successful have been the several plays in which Mr. Hodge has appeared in since his phenomenal success in "The Man From Home," that his legion of devoted admirers apparently never question in advance the success of a new play. In this instance, it is said, this faith and confidence will be more than justified, for Mr. Hodge believes that in "The Guest of Honor" he has the happiest vehicle of many seasons. It is a typical American play for a typical...
...team by7 a score of 17-1. It was a rather uninteresting game on account of its one-sidedness. The University batters found their opponents pitching very easy, and hit Beattie at will. The Old Colony men put up a good fight, but the result of the game was never for a moment in doubt after the fifth inning. In all 12 men played for the University at one time or another...
...perpetuated. Emigration of negro labor from the South to the Omaha packing plants, which are the second largest in the world, has been exceedingly great since 1917, and the total number of negroes is estimated at more than 10,000. The negro problem in the South, and now, as never before, in the Middle West, is steadily advancing to the fore. With the perpetration in Omaha of the basest crimes by negroes, the escape of most of the criminals, in spite of police vigilance, and the mediocre and insufficient punishment administered by the courts, the outbreak of a lynching fever...
...tied New York's sum for $825,000 in the list of subscriptions received throughout the country in the Endowment drive. The Endowment Fund Committee was very much gratified at this result. A striking feature of the campaign is that many people, public-spirited men and women, who have never been to Harvard, are contributing large sums, amounting sometimes to as high...
...deal a heavy blow at the spirit which has made football almost unique among college sports. Football has obtained its position as the college sport par excellence largely because of its freedom from the taint of commercialism. By nature a rough, and at times a brutal game, football is never theless dominated by the amateur spirit, and the thousands of boys and young men who play it in our schools and colleges do it for love of the game, and not from any ulterior consideration of future gain. The springing up of professional football teams will inevitably result in boys...