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Word: callings (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
Sort By: most recent first (reverse)


Usage:

Phillips Brooks House Association will hold its annual fall clothing collection on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday of next week, Collectors will go around through the various dormitories on those days to gather up, besides discarded clothing old text books and magazines. A wagon will call for the articles collected on Thursday...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: DISCARDED CLOTHES WANTED | 11/7/1916 | See Source »

...than in Greater Boston; we think of Massachusetts political questions in the light of Massachusetts history and of the great part which this Commonwealth has played and still ought to play in the affairs of the country. And we are self-supporting. We are not paupers; we do not call on state or city for our support or education. In fact we do not call on the hard-worked soil of Massachusetts for our subsistence; we bring into the state money which enables many voters of Cambridge to be technically "self-supporting." Why inquire the source of our income...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Communication | 11/3/1916 | See Source »

...thinking was being done. Many thought that Wilson and Hughes were both "good" men, but they voted the Republican ticket as a matter of course. Were the experiment possible, it would be most interesting to see how men would line up if the Republican party should suddenly decide to call itself the Conservative party, and the Democratic party the Liberal party...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Democrats Favored as "Liberal." | 11/2/1916 | See Source »

...eighties when the Harvard Advocate was something of a close corporation, the Monthly appeared to answer the call for a democratic College magazine. Since that day life in the University has changed, and now men stand more nearly on an equal footing with their fellow-students. Both of our literary papers have felt this liberalizing influence, and as a result the policies of each are so nearly identical that a little effort would make them coincide. The former cause for separation has disappeared...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE ADVOCATE-MONTHLY | 10/27/1916 | See Source »

...Herbert Tree and poetry divide this number between them, and on the whole the "noble knight" (as his Advocate critics have the strength of mind not to call him) has the best of it. We have Sir Herbert in two lights-professional and personal. Mr. Seymour reviews "Henry VIII" with the assurance and occasionally with the overflowing florescence of Mr. H. T. Parker of the Transcript. Sometimes we doubt his phrases, "a rambling story-play of no real central fulcrum"; sometimes his judgement, "in the speech of farewell he achieves the superlative work of genius"; sometimes his grammar...

Author: By R. CUTLER ., | Title: Sir Herbert Tree Treated at Length in Current Advocate | 10/24/1916 | See Source »

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