Word: sentimentally
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...throughout the country, today, the fourth anniversary of America's entry into the world war. They will be, modeled on the Wilson Club started at the University last November and will have for their object the collection of all available data concerning the Peace Conference, the expression of the sentiment among college men in favor of the League of Nations, and the perpetuating of ex-President Wilson's ideas in regard to world peace. The immediate program of the clubs is to have public meetings addressed by speakers of national prominence...
...somebody else. The in different man who goes out on the common ways of life, saying to himself "Go to, I will not be in different," is likely to make an as of himself. "To thine own self be true," indifference and all provided, of course, the sentiment or the appearance is genuine. The opposite of indifference is vivacity, susceptibility, enthusiasm. Alluring qualities. But what a jackanapes is he who merely affects them. At least the honesty of policy or habit which lets indifference stand when it is the stamp that has somehow been put upon the man, is, after...
...play in which the environment would not be unnatural to him; In Samson and Delilah he found such a play, from curtain rise to curtain fall it is imbued with the spirit of the Slav. In its frequent, terribly effective appeals to the stage; in its lack of sentiment and its slow, careful development of the plot, it is distinctly the vehicle...
...response to the invitation made in the CRIMSON of March 3, for communications on the subject of hostility to Harvard, I submit my opinion merely because I am acquainted with middle western sentiment, having thrived under it during pre-college days. The last suggestion in the editorial appearing in the afore-mentioned CRIMSON that "the Harvard social system is so designed that it repeatedly occasions detrimental resentment among a great many undergraduates," is perhaps the solution of the enigma. The greater part of the middle-west considers Harvard "snobbish and sissy-like", and I did too until after a year...
...Sentiment on the western coast is obviously much stronger than elsewhere; the frankness of its expression is only matched by the average attitude toward us in Japan itself. Circumstances are inevitably leading to a point where further "Gentleman's Agreements" will be useless and a "show-down" on both sides must ensue. Our present relations with Japan offer far more potential troubles than did our relations with Germany a decade ago; and instead of diminishing the serious aspects of the case are multiplying as time goes...