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Word: graspingly (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...subject, and hardly able to conceive of one individual who apparently knows a good deal about everything in this world. On municipal government he is recognized everywhere as an authority, and on the other great questions of the world his ideas always carry great weight. The mind which can grasp these matters has been used with equal force on questions of University life. We have often heard his views on athletics, the dormitory problem, three-year graduation and other subjects of interest of Harvard men, and although we have sometimes disagreed with his ideas, we have always been glad...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: PRESIDENT ELIOT'S ADDRESS. | 4/13/1909 | See Source »

...aims to present the truths of Christianity simply, directly and convincingly. We may not all approve of the methods of reaching men and women adopted in revival meetings, and we may not even understand an appeal that finds its way to more demonstrative natures. But although we cannot grasp its full significance, we can surely sympathize with an endeavor which aims, as we believe Dr. Chapman's does, to bring about such practical results as the strengthening of the moral fibre and the fostering of a higher integrity in our civic governments...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: DR. CHAPMAN'S MEETING. | 2/19/1909 | See Source »

...governments of our leading commercial rivals have such co-operation, and they are largely profiting by the arrangement. I am pleased to tell you that this organization of commercial interests is making excellent progress, under the direction of an Executive Council, and that the Department is ready to heartily grasp its hands. Further than this, the Department, upon a request laid before it by the President, has warmly endorsed a plan to establish commercial instruction in the leading state universities and other institutions in states where no such universities exist, so that the science, as well as all the arts...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: ARTICLE BY OSCAR S. STRAUS | 3/13/1908 | See Source »

...most pretentious piece in the issue is "The End of the Journey," by E. B. Sheldon, a longish story dealing vitally with an ever-important theme--a son's belated grasp of a mother's love. So long as merely mother and son are before us, the author fares well, both in character-drawing and in his ability to sustain the scenes; but in the son's brief interim of idiocy, which involves an unscrupulous actress and her vulgar but honest husband, there is an undue amount of melodrama, even cruelty. For blind idealizing, even of the pertinacious, youthful sort...

Author: By H. DEW. Fuller ., | Title: Mr. Fuller's Review of Monthly | 1/29/1908 | See Source »

...Liszt pieces were played by B. J. Fitzgerald '08 with uncommon technical finish and grasp of style. Possibly the most satisfactory performance on the program was that of Schumann's Andante and Variations played by G. L. Foote '08 and J. A. Warner '09. It was exquisitely phrased, interpreted with fine appreciation of its varying moods, altogether a performance of real artistic merit. Mr. Clapp especially distinguished himself in the Scherzo by Foote, and in the rousing vitality of his rythm in the Brahms Rhapsodie...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: MUSICAL CLUB CONCERT | 12/17/1907 | See Source »

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