Word: thinks
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...America, in her library and in her gymnasium. Yet, strange to say, of no two things do Harvard men seem less appreciative. The gymnasium and library are both used by a large number of men, but not by as many men as ought to use them. We do not think it necessary to enumerate the advantages of either of these institutions, but we do think that a little urging is not out of place. Different though the institutions are in the ends for which they were built, their benefit are of about equal value. The man who is at once...
...laid, and even if it is not quite certain that they are to blame it makes such a very spicy article for a paper. Is it not a proof on the face of it, of its unlikelihood, that such an item is copied all over the country? People think it is strange - it is surprising - no doubt it is, but does any of them think that its strangeness bears, maybe, some witness to its unlikelihood, that the astonishment which they feel at reading it is perhaps a proof of its exaggeration? No. They accept it as true, and hold...
Prof. to senior in history class. "Mr. - what do you think of the plan of the early English, of calling in the Danes to help drive out William the Conquerer...
...think in was a Dangerous policy...
...takes a look in the library any morning or afternoon and reflects, as he sees the men at work, on how small their number is when compared with the whole university, he must necessarily think of the opportunities which by far the greatest portion of the students are throwing away. For example, out of the hundred or more men in History XIII hardly fifteen daily make use of the books reserved by Dr. Hart, although a large amount of reference work is necessary in that course in order to reap its full benefit. The advantages of a library like...