Word: referse
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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The new weekly is full of talk of Ben Jonson and Coffee House, of the Cock Horse and The Merle, of the inaccessibility of professors and the limitations of the 47 Workshop; casual varied and good-humored talk that exhales a faint eighteenth century aroma and is mildly entertaining. Its...
I beg to acknowledge your courteous letter in which you ask me to express an opinion as the causes of what you evidently think is a rather general belief that a Harvard education tends to make a man a snob. The quickest and best way to answer your question is...
Apropos of your editorial in Thursday morning's issue on "Hostility to Harvard", I note that Arthur Train with whose stories, of "Tutt and Mr. Tutt" a greater part, no doubt, of the undergraduate population is familiar--refers in this week's number of the Saturday Evening Post in not...
After having been graduated from Harvard, I am inclined to doubt the existence of a "Harvard type" as such. Among graduates of Harvard there may be snobs--those who would deny it most strenuously are very likely to be those most open to fault--but certainly they are not numerous...
(The "literally broke" to which our correspondent refers was based on the fact that Chicago's supply of quick assets and cash is so depleted that; she has resorted to paying municipal employees in scrip. "Per capita debt" seems to mean nothing without taking into account the resources per capita...