Word: decentered
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...absence of decent toilet facilities in most of the Yard dormitories has been for years an irritating grievance. Although this deplorable state of affairs exists in all the Yard buildings except Hollis and Stoughton, it is particularly unfortunate in Holworthy and Thayer, which are reserved for Seniors; for the lack of these facilities seriously interferes with the segregation of the Senior class. The present Juniors, owing to the liberality of the Corporation and to the able management of the committee in charge of the Senior room allotment, have taken more rooms in the Senior buildings than any previous class. This...
...front of Holworthy Hall to go on their annual picnic. In spite of the protests of many years the morning will be made hideous by the blowing of horns and other instruments of torture, and everyone in Cambridge will know that the Seniors are off on a tear. While decent people are trying in vain to sleep, the members of the class of 1909 will receive a mug and a horn from the window of Holworthy 9, and will have their picture taken under the classic elms. Something in the nature of a parade will then take place with Kanrich...
...accent. The joke-in-general is a last despairing cry. The latter requirement, however, demands more than the humorous eye: there must be oddities-rough edges in tradition, custom, manners, personalities to catch it. Here it is that the Lampoon is at a disadvantage. Life with us is too decent orderly, conventional, grown-up man- nish, and of the world worldly. There are few persons who of their won selves write caricature, merely ex-officio, in salt without meat. Again, very little that is ridiculous happens, and when it does, we are apt to regard it only in its ethical...
...culture" as he is severe towards the "coarse mind"; and the "poser" wherever found, whether he reads Pierre Loti to maintain refinement or abstains from drinking milk because he thinks it unmanly, is called, if he be a pretender, "diabolically insincere". In short Mr. Brooks depicts a very decent sort of fellow, who writes, and he asks: "Why shouldn't he write--and as honestly and ambitiously as he likes--without being laughed at or deprecated?" He also protests with reason against the insistence heard among graduates that undergraduates, to be sensible, must write on college subjects...
...least mean of necessity to hold office. It means to take an intelligent, disinterested and practical part in the everyday duties of the average citizen, of the citizen who is not a faddist or a doctrinaire, but who abhors corruption and dislikes inefficiency; who wishes to see decent government prevail at home, with genuine equality of opportunity for all men so far as it can be brought about, and who wishes, as far as foreign matters are concerned, to see this nation treat all other nations, great and small with respect, and if need be with generosity...