Word: tenderizers
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
This evening at 7 o'clock in the Faculty Room of the Union the St. Paul's Catholic Club of the University will tender a dinner to Professor Jeremiah D. M. Ford '94, who has during his recent exchange professorship abroad received several honorary degrees from French and Belgium universities. Following the dinner, which has been planned for about 75 men, R. T. Murphy '23, will introduce the toastmaster, General E. L. Logan '98, of the Yankee Division and formerly Commander of the American Legion of Massachusetts...
...would appreciate your giving this letter a position in your paper; this I have been asked to request in order that our Society may publically tender its support and its congratulations to the Liberal Club of Harvard. P. SOHOIFFLER...
...resist any check on their money-spending privileges, any order forcing them to show their accounts to a comptroller or to submit to his investigation of their demands for appropriations. Hence it is understandable that the first comptroller of the budget needed to be a fighting man with no tender feelings on the subject. President Harding evidently bore this in mind when he appointed "Hell and Maria" Dawes...
...beads of perspiration to his brow? Tomorrow, or Friday, the cares of the outside world will settle upon him; today he is carefree among the confetti. As he parades in joyous camaraderie or basks on the warm turf within the Stadium, the kaleidoscopic scenes will become part of a tender and ever youthful memory. And as the events of the day march by, he looks forward with growing delight to the last scene of all--the refreshing shower that falls upon his parched brow as the clock of Memorial Tower strikes midnight. In fact, as the poet has so aptly...
...modern doctor who a message will be heard and sustained outside academic walls. He may, if he looks too far ahead, suffer the martyr's fate. But, if he chooses the wiser method of teaching those things the multitude can hear, he may sustain himself without resort to the tender mercies of trustees, presidents; and bursars. His earnings may, indeed, be sufficient to lift him above the feelings of indigence so destructive to free thinking. He may avoid commencement oration, Phi Beta Kappa addresses, the conferring of honorary degrees faculty meetings, examinations, and pestiferous students. No Carnegie pension lulls...