Word: showings
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...seems that all the officers should like to attend the addresses by the New York officers, and although the course is not compulsory in any way I will have to surmise that those officers who fail to show up are not much interested in their work...
...response to the order of the Executive Committee of the Student Council, the nominating committee of the Senior Class has made a recount of the ballots which were declared invalid after the election on December 19. The revised totals show no difference in the officers from the original count, and only in one case is the order changed. J. C. Harris, instead of having one less vote than G. C. Caner, now has one more. In nearly every case there was an increase in the number of votes received. A few votes are still invalid because in the case...
...book, which is to give a correct and non-partisan account of the events which led to the outbreak of the European War, by a chronological use of the published dispatches of the nations involved, Professor von Mach pointed out several statements from the Entente nations which tend to show that the action of Great Britain in the closing days of July, 1914, was decidedly incriminating. "It is undoubtedly some foreign influence, financial or otherwise, which has caused the removal of my book from circulation and the attempts of the Macmillan Company to buy up all copies already sold...
...photographic phase, the Illustrated carries pictures of the principals in the Dramatic Club's show, the Senior Class Marshals, the new Farnsworth Room at the Widener Memorial Library and Captain Wheeler of the University football team. And there is also present the "dope" on the hockey season. The complete number is quite creditable and can fit into Volume XVIII of the Illustrated with full rights. N. R. O'HARA...
Perhaps the most striking thing about the December Monthly is that every bit of it is well written. There is not one bad thing in the number, and the good things show a really surprising command of language. Yet there is nothing very notable in the collection, one receives the same impression that one so often gets from Harvard papers: here are a lot of clever young men who have read a good deal and know how to write; they are civilized, intelligent, sensitive, literary--but they haven't very much to say for themselves. The poets, particularly fail...