Word: live
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Directory of the living graduates of Yale University for 1914 has just been issued. It contains 18,287 names, and the authentic addresses of all but one per cent, of them. Of the graduates whose addresses have been ascertained, 5,498 live in New England, 6,311 in the Central Eastern States of New York, New Jersey and Pennsylvania; 3,111 in the Middle West; 1,234 in the far Western States; 105 in outlying territories and possessions of the United States, and 507 in a total of 42 foreign countries...
...meeting presents an unusual opportunity to find out who the live members of the College are. Efforts have been made in the past to find them out, and to inaugurate through forums and open meetings something in the nature of intellectual sociability. We learn that this meeting tonight is the first evidence of another attempt to establish intercourse between the thoughtful men of the University. The spirit that backs up the football team is a good thing. But can't some of it be enlisted in support and commendation of the initiative of the Speakers' Club and the co-operation...
...Harvard Monthly wants to welcome tonight every Freshman, Sophomore, and Junior who has a live interest in economics, athletics, literature, politics, or social questions of any kind. In short the Monthly wants to talk over its policy for this year with every student who can write and has something to write about...
...word more! The Monthly is not endowed. It depends entirely on its own merits, and the merits of a good business manager. If you are a live wire, and want to try your hand at a real business proposition, then the Treasurer of the Monthly wants to see you, too. Come to the Sanctum, top floor of the Union, at 8 o'clock tonight...
There are signs of change in the Harvard Monthly besides its new form. It is nearer the normal magazine in shape; its decorations have grown more seemly; but that is not all. The October issue shows an excellent and largely successful attempt to achieve the live yet dignified spirit of a good monthly review. Quite evidently the Monthly is through, for a year at least, with being a literary safe-deposit vault. Under the new board it appears bent on emerging from those purple shades where the pleasant but inconsequent art of canning the "best literary product of the University...