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Word: calls (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1900-1909
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Usage:

...graded crew rowing at the Weld and Newell Clubs has so far been very unsatisfactory. The limited number of men who responded to the call for candidates at each club on Tuesday has made it possible to form only five crews in all: three at the Newell and two at the Weld. There is but a small amount of experienced material and owing to the bad weather this week, the crews have held very little practice. The second and third Newell crews have been unable to row on the river because of a lack of coxswains...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Progress of Graded Crew Rowing. | 4/30/1904 | See Source »

There are still a few men who have not made appointments at Notman's.--in spite of the frequent notices the Committee has given them. The Committee regrets that further delay will necessitate the omission of pictures from the Album. This is absolutely the last call...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Senior Album Notice. | 4/29/1904 | See Source »

There is no call for a radical departure. But there is reason--and strong reason, too--for greater care than ever in choosing the men who are to accept the trust of caring for an institution which should be regarded as Harvard's most valued possession--a veritable "House of Fellowship." Among the nominees there are men who will work for the Union. They are naturally difficult to distinguish. But every member of the Union can today well afford to weigh them in the balance of his own mind and after the dictates of his own conscience cast his vote...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Communication. | 4/7/1904 | See Source »

...quote the composer's own words: "I wrote the symphony in the vernal passion that sways men until they are very old, and surprises them again with each new year. The first entrance of trumpets is to be sounded as though from on high, like unto an awakening call; it begins to grow green everywhere, butterflies take wing, birds pour forth their melodies, and little by little all things come that pertain in any way to spring...

Author: By W. R. Spalding., | Title: Ninth Symphony Concert Tonight. | 4/7/1904 | See Source »

...fiction is a little lurid, but moral. To call it bookish is little more than to call it contemporary. H. Hagedorn, Jr., draws indeed from the night-life of Harvard: but one soon scents the moral thesis--a 'horrible example' to the text of the admirable sermon of the editorial: and soon recognizes Pengrove and Farrell for what they must have been to the author's own mind--less prodigals than premisses...

Author: By J. B. Fletcher., | Title: The Harvard Monthly for April. | 4/4/1904 | See Source »

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