Word: unless
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Virginia was defeated by the University of Pennsylvania at Philadelphia yesterday, 7 to 1. The Virginia team is now near the end of a long schedule. It is a fairly strong team, but its principal strength is in its two pitchers, E. Brown, formerly of Andover, and Witmer, and unless these men are given good support the nine is likely to make a poor showing. Pennsylvania won two games from Virginia on it southern trip, by the scores of 7 to 3 and to 0. Amherst took two games from Virginia...
...conforms to the foregoing rules laid down by the Faculty; or, if it does not, will inquire whether there is good cause for suggesting that the case ought to be treated as exceptional. The plan that he adopts at the end of his Freshman year he must adhere to, unless he can show good ground for a change. It may be added that the new rules will be in force for the class that enters next autumn, but the Freshmen now in college will be encouraged to follow them...
...need of a thorough understanding between the youth of Germany and this country. It is surprising, he said, how little each knows of the other, and how inaccurate and garbled even that little is. The exchange professors which attempt to bring the countries closer together, can do but little unless the attitude of the students whom they address is favorable. In closing, he complimented the Verein and offered to be of assistance to it in any way which lay in his power...
More nearly than any other German play, unless it is Sudermann's "Heimath," of our immediate time, "Alt Heidelberg" is a universal, almost a classic piece. Even mistrustful Paris has seen it gladly, while American audiences long since warmed to its sentiment and its humor. German it is at every turn; in its satire of the petty routine and stiff-backed etiquette of the modern Pumper-nickel that Meyer-Foerster calls Sachsen-Karlsburg; in its glimpses of the life of the students at Heidelberg; and, above all, in its two sentimentalists--the old tutor, Juettner, dreaming over the university...
...Juettner, indeed, illusion never flagged and it was the true illusion of the old man's sentiment. Skillful, too, was the suggestion in Mrs. Barnes-Hochberg's Kaethie that for once the girl meant more and meant it more sincerely than she had with what must have been, unless the ways of Heidelberg inns have sadly changed, the twenty predecessors of Karl Heinrich. The other parts went with varying degrees of competence; the chorus of students scarcely needed to believe itself German; and if Mr. Barnes-Hochberg's prince lacked romantic illusion--a very difficult thing to attain...