Word: widely
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...undergraduate to treat other men's conduct with an easy outward tolerance. Where a great many feel disgusted with men who do this or that or, with responsibilities to uphold, go on probation, very few show their disapproval. Tolerance is an essential of breadth; perhaps even a tolerance as wide as the undergraduate's is an essential, though it fails to hold backsliders up to the mark. But three-quarters of the men mentioned above and three-quarters of all men on probation are there because of indifference; and they must know that a very considerable proportion of the undergraduates...
...Harvard Musical Review tells us. "A Note on Stravinsky", by E. B. Hill '94, gives a brief outline of the works of the Russian who seems to be again pushing music beyond the limits of reason or rapture. Though as yet practically unknown in America, his works are receiving wide attention abroad. The "Sacre de Printemps," a futuristic ballet, was recently declared by the gifted Florent Schmitt to be one of an immortal trio--the two others being "Tristan" and "Pelleas...
...April issue of the Harvard Illustrated Magazine the table of contents embraces a wide range of subjects written by men who clearly are qualified for their tasks. To some at least it will seem a pity to rob the art department of its blackboard by printing a photograph on the cover, but possibly this was done merely in the nature of an experiment...
...these enter the Business School. Many consider courses in Economics essential to the making of a business man, but generally the most efficient men are versed in the classics and other studies. Vocational training is all very well but it should be "vocational training in a very wide and liberal sense...
...exotic growth of which the very existence is precarious. Mr. Damon's article makes a searching examination into the various requirements which have to be adjusted in this most composite of arts, and his suggestions certainly have the spontaneous enthusiasm of youth. One point, however, is somewhat wide of the mark. The statement that "cities of any size abroad are able to support a company throughout the winter, whereas Boston cannot do this for eighteen weeks" merely records the chief practical difference between foreign management and our own. Every one of the leading opera houses of Germany and France...