Word: offered
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1929
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...action. The original Providence "olevon", with two weeks of light work behind it, should be in shape to furnish the Crimson with a final taste of hard, aggressive opposition which should put the University players in a position to be ready for the best that Yale can offer in the season's traditional classic...
...inherited a large fortune from my father but have doubled it many times in Brazilian, Spanish and Mexican companies from which ] claim to have derived a total profit of one and a quarter billion Belgian francs ($35,000,000). My most famous attempted 'deal' was an offer to loan $100,000,000 to Belgium and France wherewith to stabilize their currencies. This fell through when it was discovered that I demanded personal control of the state finance of both countries during the stabilization period...
From here on the best advice I can offer to one unacquainted with the geography of the place is to take a field trip in Geology 4. Since it may be a bit late for such advice my second best suggestion is to follow an groups of persons who seem to be going some where. If this also falls ask a police...
Sponsored by Matthew Luce '91, University Regent, and endorsed by President Lowell, the Union offer marks the first official attempt to find a solution for the present eating problem in Cambridge. The new plan provides for the installation of a number of tables on the second floor of the Union where four, ten, or more students may eat regularly at the same place each day. This will revive the old procedure at the University, whereby a group of friends ate together during their last three years at college...
Amusing, even trenchant, are the remarks which Robert Littel (himself a critic of no mean ability) has to offer, in the New Republic, concerning the art of book reviewing. His article, whether taken seriously as a professional indictment or genially as a personal confession gives rise to a feeling that what he says is more or less true. Reviewers, Mr. Littel writes, are notably overworked persons; and consequently their styles the excepts a choice minority) have come to be strangely, and most grotesquely, similar. They seem to have certain words which they invariably use, and without which no book review...