Word: sentimentally
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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That the long fall rowing season had accustomed the men to the new stroke, so that they are now ready for a successful racing season, was the sentiment expressed by Coach Stevens at the Inaugural crew meeting yesterday afternoon. Over 250 men filled Smith Halls Common Room...
...know of no other American poet who has succeeded so subtly in combining real sentiment with the vernacular. His poems in slang have been at once beautiful, tender, well written. He has intuitive knowledge of the boy and girl of shop and street, their trials, their loves. If his play possesses the same quality of joy and sorrow that is shown in his poetry, it should run forever, and even if he forgets the popular accents of New York on the sands of Palm Beach, he cannot lose there his wistful, shy boys and girls who drift through his pages...
...community"; on the 218th birthday of Benjamin Franklin: "He was one of that marvelous group of Revolutionary leaders each of whom seemed if his particular department a supreme genius" ; to the B'ne Israel Congregation of Cincinnati on its 100th anniversary: "To these long established agencies of American sentiment and patriotism our country is deeply indebted. . . ." ¶ Cyril William Peter Rees of London, 15 years, 78 pounds, insured for $25,000 and known as "Peter the Page," presented President Coolidge with a letter from the Lord Mayor of London inviting him to the British Empire Exhibition of 1924. Even...
...pulling guns, cracking jokes, riding pintos, drinking redeye, winning heroines, proving that the accusations against them are (in large part) false? anyway exaggerated. This book follows the accepted pattern. He gives you what you want if you buy a book with this title?unencumbered by vast masses of sticky sentiment. And his plots are always astonishingly novel rearrangements of the old counters...
...timely article on "Godless Harvard" issued as the sentiment of Professor E. C. Moore on our religious life places before us an all too prevalent attitude of the public which must be recognized...