Word: bachelored
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...enter College for Price Greenleaf Aid. James A. Rumrill Scholarships and Charles Elliott Perkins Scholarships, for 1918-19. The Price Greenleaf Fund is distributed at this time among persons who are about to begin their first year of residence and who will pursue studies towards the degree of Bachelor of Arts. The James A. Rumrill Scholarships are given to prospective Freshmen or unclassified students...
...Schaub received the degree of bachelor of laws from the Law School in 1906. He is a graduate of the College of Charles City, Ia., and has received the A.M. degree from the State University of Iowa. He will act as the dean of the Business School as long as Dean Gay continues his work in Washington, but at the end of that time will resign his position in favor of Dean Gay. It is expected that the latter will continue to serve on the council throughout the duration of the war, and possibly in reconstruction work after the conclusion...
...characters are masters of misunderstanding, they employ their subtlety in letting the obvious elude them; if they once stopped to think the whole show would be given away, so they never stop to think. Yet the play is charming, with its odor of jockeys and horse-racing, baronets and bachelor apartments, epigrams, good bad women and other pleasant things now out of date. True, the text now contains motors cars, and a subway, but imagine these characters in them! Oh, those were delightful days when you could drop in on my Lord So-and-So any evening at midnight...
After his graduation from the University in 1904, Mr. Roosevelt took a degree of bachelor of laws from the Columbia Law School in 1907, and was admitted to the New York Bar the same year. Three years later he was elected to the New York Senate, a position which he held for three years, resigning in 1913 to take up the office of Assistant Secretary of the Navy under the Wilson administration. Mr. Roosevelt was also elected to the Board of Overseers of the University at the last election of nominees...
Next comes--oh, yes; oh, yes--a Christmas story. After two pages, in which the old millionaire bachelor demonstrates in many successive speeches that he does not appreciate Christmas, he leaves the club and starts for home in his "perfectly appointed car." Presently he learns from his chauffeur that they have knocked down a child--"a wisp of a girl, poorly clad, whose pinched face spoke the lack of food." From this point on the old millionaire buys Christmas presents until along toward the end, when we hear of "the star which they saw in the East"; and catch from...