Word: sanely
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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Reverting to prose: J. S. Watson, Jr., in a resume of Professor Muensterberg's book misplaces his emphasis in dwelling on points which he finds extravagant. If the book be for the most part "sane," why not convey that impression? "The Spirit of Satire" is better; it exemplifies the serious prose which befits a magazine with intellectual readers. Still, one should, not begin with Greeks and end with grunts. For R. W. Chubb's statement of "The Position of the Internationalists of Europe" the reader will feel grateful for a timely, informative article. There is but one story; better...
...with which college students love to conjure. It is used as an excuse - an' apology for something that has no right to exist. There is a genuine College Spirit,-and it is a "consummation devoutly to be wished." It means real loyalty,-not vandalism. Love of institution that prompts sane, beneficial activity is what the term comprehends. In its truest sense, College Spirit expresses all that college life means to us. It is a crystalization of the undercurrent of the institution. It is the moving force...
...articles appealed most to me personally. One was on "Culture or Cramming," in which, under a rather sensational title, Mr. Larrabee gives a very broad-minded, sane, and--again I repeat the word--interesting exposition of his views on the present well-read-ness (or better, if I must coin a word anyhow) ill-read-ness of the average Harvard undergraduate...
...Oliveira Lima, to occupy, for one year, the new chair of Latin American History and Economics. It is no great exaggeration to say that it would be impossible to find a man more qualified than he to fulfill the purpose for which this professorship was founded, namely, to spread sane and accurate knowledge of the past and present conditions of our sister republics to the southward...
...Watson's study of Bandelaire under the title "The Greatest Decadent," together with the story "Poet of the Ghetto" by a Ben Sion Trynin--an obvious and awful pseudonym--remain the only things really worth while in the number. The first is, if not profound, at least refreshingly sane and balanced in these days when to be young is necessarily to be decadent--or one would imagine so from recent Monthlies. The second, apart from a shabby and sentimental plot, possesses, in dialogue and description, a sense of actuality of life on the East Side of New York that...