Word: bolded
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...cannot see far ahead. No predictions as to the length or the fortunes of the present war are reliable. But after months of painful doubt and despite the dark prospect of suffering and sacrifice, we can at least be sure that today the bold thing to do is also the wise and the necessary thing to do. We have been cautious and prudent. We have been patient to the verge of dishonor. At length it is permitted us to go forward, one in thought and deed, and to be in the sight of all men that high-spirited nation that...
...heart was bold and his faith was strong
...into a single, sharp effect. Mr. Murray Sheehan's two sonnets on "Fate," however, bear more clearly the stamp of vitalizing human experience. One feels that Mr. Murray is saying something because he cannot hold it back--because he has something to say. And at the end of his bold plea for individuality and self-reliance there comes to the reader a sense of satisfaction--dispersal of a doubt, vindication of faith, or what you will--that is seldom found in modern poetry of any sort. But Mr. Murray is the least skilled of the Monthly's versifiers. Only...
...exponents of combination hammered out two runs in the first of the seventh; and the Phi Beta Kappa men, aided for the second day by Herter, resorted to scholarly craft to win out. Their batting order was entirely changed to bring their heaviest hitters to the plate. Stoutly and bold-facially they upheld their action as legal, and Umpire Brown, who only occasionally showed faint glimmerings of baseball knowledge, allowed it. Crafty dealing, and its perpetrators, however, received their just reward. McIntosh ignominiously struck out, Herter could only touch Morris's remarkable delivery for an easy infield grounder on which...
...number contains one brief essay, three 'stories, and five poems, at least one, "To a School fellow," by C. V. Wright, being of real excellence; but the balance of the number, one-half of its contents, is devoted to "The Case against the CRIMSON." Judging from their use of bold type, and the preconcerted and gratuitous nature of the attack, the editors are evidently not unwilling that this "feature" should become the sensation of the hour. A review of the editorial policy of the Monthly for the past two years reveals the steady growth of a spirit of timeliness...