Word: offered
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1929
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...when we care to reach out. What are the signs by which we may know this movement? He finds us looking out to world horizons. Foreign plays and foreign actors come to our stages. Good, not because they are foreign, but because they have something new and interesting to offer. He finds our producers trying new means and methods in production. Theories of the theatre are beginning to be discussed. Plays are published. In the field of stage-design, he finds the most advance. They are the leaders in the new era, forced to mark time while the others catch...
After all it can't be dreadfully exciting on the road to Mandalay--or even off of it. The flying fishes play very well, no doubt, but they offer no real intellectual stimulus, and the dawn coming up like thunder all the time must be as monotonously tactless as Wagnerian opera or the alarm-clock. Moreover there is China always across the bay, never any nearer, never any further, serene, immovable, Chinese...
Gabriele d'Anminzio, Italian poet-airman: "The Associated Press reported that I had 'given my all' to Italy. They quoted me as saying in a lengthy deed of gift: 'I offer all that remains of me to the Italian people...
...glad to come back to Harvard," said Mr. F. F. Mitchell to a CRIMSON reporter yesterday. Mitchell, University baseball coach in 1916, has accepted an offer to coach the Harvard battery candidates this year. He had a notably successful season with the 1916 University nine, which lost only three contests out of 26 and defeated both Yale and Princeton in straight games. Since that time he has been a major league manager, piloting the Chicago and Boston National League teams. He is now business manager of the latter club, a position which will not interfere with his Cambridge coaching duties...
...purpose of this innovation is to offer to Harvard men, Harvard clubs, and secondary schools an opportunity to Keep in touch with Harvard activities without going to the expense of a yearly subscription to the CRIMSON. A reduced rate of $2.00 a year has been made to all clubs taking five or more subscriptions for distribution or for general use. In addition to serving graduates, Harvard clubs, and secondary schools, the new weekly issue is expected to appeal particularly to those who have sons at Harvard and who wish to keep in touch with the events of the week...