Word: repays
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Granville Stanley Hall, President Emeritus of Clark University (see MILESTONES), may be remembered more as an educator or a divine than a scientist, but science will never be able to repay the debt it owes him. He did two supreme things...
...warm feeling of gratitude for the efforts of our crew management and the men themselves to do all they could to give the Crimson oarsmen ever opportunity to make the most of their short sojourn on the Schuylkill. Yet this little show of appreciation is more than enough to repay any time and trouble which was expended for the convenience of the Harvard athletes. It is certainly a comfortable feeling when one's unselfish efforts for the benefit of some one else are noticed and appreciated...
...Union) "a part of the struggle between popular and autocratic principles of government in England". In short, Professor Mcllwaine's interpretation is very interesting and suggestive, but not wholly convincing. Nevertheless it is an interpretation that is well worth weighing, and the book is one that will amply repay careful study. The whole matter of the why and wherefores of the American Revolution is so complex that probably no single interpretation will ever gain undisputed authority among historians, and the present study is one that cannot be neglected by any, careful student of the constitutional origins of this country...
...more inclusive one is Elie Faure's History of Art,* now being published in English by Harper. The third volume, on Renaissance Art, has come from the press, preceded by Ancient and Medieval, and to be followed by Modern. The books are not easy to read, but they repay a little delving. Faure is a brilliant stylist, his word-stream brimming with metaphor and colorful imagery, always intent upon inner meaning, and emotional overtones, so that his writing is obscure to those who expect mere surface description. But the translation is itself an admirable work of letters. He treats...
...nutshell, Russia will repay its debts to France, providing she can obtain at least a ten-year moratoriurm and credits for the promotion of economic reconstruction. She will refrain from supporting Communist propaganda in France and will restore in part the property of French citizens which was nationalized when the Bolsheviki seized power in 1917. The part that the Soviet Government desires to retain as national property will be paid for in various ways, such as by concession grants, principally in oil, a commodity which France lacks. All this is made dependent upon recognition of Russia by France...