Word: pleasantest
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...story is told with meticulous attention to the detail of his vulgarisms. THE GIRL NEXT DOOR-Lee Wilson Dodd-Button ($2.00). Mr. Dodd calls his book "the crabbed chronicle of a misanthrope." That is an authoritative statement of what it isn't. It is one of the pleasantest, most amiable of melodramas -an account of the life and opinions of an incomparable quartet in a suburban "Garden City" built over an unwholesome marsh. ESSAYS AT LARGE. BOOKS REVIEWED-Two books by J. C. Squire -Doran ($2.00, $2.00). Mr. J. C.' Squire (Solomon Eagle), Editor of The London Mercury...
...members of the class of 1906 who have not yet done so to order their caps and gowns and so to prevent the class of 1906 from being cut off from the benefits of a custom which members of former senior classes have found to be one of the pleasantest features of the last few weeks of life as an undergraduate".--Editorial in the CRIMSON on March...
...grad" decisions that memories of an eating club similar to those being organized at the Union are his pleasantest recollections from college days. A group of ten, from all classes in the College and from various graduate schools, met for each meal, and stayed at the table often for an hour or more afterward, discussing any topic that happened to arise. Their group was as diverse as possible, including a football letter-man, a poet, prospective doctors and lawyers, a Crimson editor, and an embryo philosopher. The friendships of this group, he says, have lasted more strongly than any others...
There has been some talk of omitting for the graduating class this year all those traditional festivities which he served for other classes as the pleasantest occasion of the four-year course. It is doubtful whether any large purpose would be served by having 1917 pass form college unsung and unrejoiced. The German arms will not by one day be rendered less invincible. Nor will the members of the class be rendered more stoic for enduring the fortunes...
...about to follow the well-established precedent of choosing homes for themselves in the Yard. Housed beneath the ancient roofs that have sheltered many generations of Harvard men, and surrounded by groups of old and well-tried friendships, they may round out the last and pleasantest year of their college life. After a separation of two years, old friendships will be renewed. The process of unification and good-fellowship among the members of the Class of 1918, so auspiciously begun in the dormitories on the river, will then be brought to a successful conclusion...