Word: phasing
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...present-day duties. We have seen of late the beginning of a healthy undergraduate interest in the affairs of the race, and in a discussion of its problems. But the University has also its right to share in our attention the matter of class elections is only one phase. There is no reason why the two cannot exist together. By all means let us continue to share in the problems of the outside world; but in doing so, let us not forget these problems which lie at our door...
...after victory was achieved, is so fresh in the popular mind that it requires no extensive review at this time. His inspiring example and his energetic labor in the cause of patriotism have borne their fruit. His career through the war marked him as a national leader, and this phase of Leonard Wood's life needs but one explanation now that he is looming up as the strongest candidate for the Republican presidential nomination...
...Graduate School of Education, the latest phase in this development, owes its origin, no less than the older schools owe their development, to President Eliot. Its establishment, then, makes this year a particularly memorable one in President Eliot's life. An appreciation of President Eliot's service to this new school was made at the dinner in celebration of the new school when Dr. Wallace Buttrick, Chairman of the General Education Board, said, "In naming the fund of the school "The Charles William Eliot Fund,' it is not so much honoring him as honoring...
Nothing is worth reading unless it is true. That is an axiom that applies to fiction as well as fact. Mr. Sabatini, in his latest volume of "The Historical Nights' Entertainment" has recognized one phase of this axiom. In his preface he says, "I set out again with the same ambitious aim of adhering scrupulously in every instance to actual recorded facts," and he notes a few trivial deviations from the facts of the incidents he depicts. But while he has been meticulous in his plots, he has deviated so far from the truth in his manner of presentation that...
...hands of the much superior and faster St. Paul's team the 1923 hockey seven yesterday suffered a 6 to 1 defeat at Concord, New Hampshire. The school boys were superior to the Freshmen in nearly every phase of the game, but during the second period the Crimson septet braced and throughout this period kept the St. Paul's players from scoring. Davis, the Concord school's right centre, was by far the most powerful factor in his team's victory, and almost unassisted he scored five of the six goals. A. H. Ladd and R. Watts played the best...