Word: types
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Balch '12; Norman Winslow Cabot '98, George Richmond Fearing '93, and Dr. John Charles Phillips '99; the other one will be the property of Godfrey Lowell Cabot '82, and will be operated by him and his son, James Jackson Cabot '13. The aeroplanes will be of the Burgess-Dunne type with no rudders. The wings will have a span of 46 feet and the machines will be equipped with 140 horse-power Sturtevant motors...
Secret diplomacy in its worst form, coupled with the inflated preparedness of the type called "adequate" brought on this war in Europe. If the people of this nation knew the forces behind this wild call for "adequate" preparation, this false "insurance" of peace, if our young men understood the financial and commercial pressure back of this agitation, they would treat with the indignation it deserves this wholesale betrayal of the spiritual ideals and forces of America. Force, the "Big Stick," the mailed fist, the iron hand behind the Law and such cant phraseology of the half-baked thinker are running...
...young Harvard men do not ask ourselves and our elders these questions, If we are content to have the same type of thought served up to us in our own University daily paper as is provided in any of the commercial press, then we deserve to be turned out by a highly efficient machine as "highly specialized experts" able to destroy the works of civilization, but utterly incapable to achieve either physical, mental or spiritual construction on new and really democratic lines . . . "Where there is no vision, the people perish." LEON SHERMAN PRATT 1Dv. W. HARRIS CROOK...
Aroused by a similar "type of thought as is provided in any of the commercial press" appearing in yesterday's CRIMSON two pacifists have attacked that article in today's communication column...
...clever portrayal of the powerful influence on them of their parents. The dialogue of the prologue takes the spectator directly to the scenes of the intervening acts, and the epilogue picks the action up exactly where the prologue leaves off. Though similar in construction, it is an entirely different type of play than the Craig Prize Plays of the last two years. "Believe Me, Xantippe," by J. F. Ballard, now running in England under the title of "Willie Goes West," and Cleaves Kinkead's "Common Clay," now featuring Jane Cowl and John Mason in New York...