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

...Richards '02, M. F. Hewitt '01, J. W. Foster '02, A. Peterson '04, O. Chew '03, N. S. McKendrick '04, E. H. B. Humphries '03, E. C. Smith '04, J. P. Williams '03, B. J. Dougherty '04, N. L. Silverman '03, S. C. Smith '03, W. E. Chapman '03, M. E. Gruch...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: CLASS GAMES PROGRAMME. | 4/4/1901 | See Source »

...spirit of the author's career. Throughout his life, Stevenson had constantly to fight--against sickness and the very near approach of death, but he was always ardent, joyous and invincibly courageous. Stevenson's artistic and literary ideas may not have been original, and may even be, as Mr. Chapman believes, too fragile and ephemeral to endure; but Stevenson's character was unique, and the remembrance and the influence of it will be enduring. "Sick and well I have had a splendid life," he wrote, not long before his death...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Robert Louis Stevenson. | 2/27/1901 | See Source »

...Davenport. "Studies on the Cause of the Accelerating Effect of Heat upon Growth," by T. W. Galloway '90, "Pearson's Grammar of Science," by C. S. Pierce '95, and "Chapters on the Stars," by Professor Simon Newcomb '58, January. Popular Science Monthly; "Doctrine of Non-resistance," by John Jay Chapman '84, January Mind; "Current Notes on Meteorology," by R. DeC. Ward '89, Science...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Articles and Books by Harvard Men. | 1/4/1901 | See Source »

...Clerk, E. E. Coolidge, H. W. French, W. H. Laverack; 1902--C. Seaver, A. Winsor; 1903--A. Ames, H. Burns, E. B. Claffee, G. Davis, N. W. Edson, F. Foster, J. W. Foster, S. A. Greeley, D. Knowlton C.A., McLane, E. C. Moore, L. Ward; 1904--W. E. Chapman, H. T. Eaton, P. Fosdick, S. P. Hoguet, W. Kent, T. D. Robinson, T. B. Souther, A. Wait...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Hockey Team Work | 12/13/1900 | See Source »

...Grouping Thoreau with Alcott under the lesser men of Concord is clearly a lapse of judgment. The subject of transcendentalism is also handied in a somewhat superficial manner. The spirit of Emerson is also missed, perhaps because of over-emphasis on the "Yankee" element in Emerson. Mr. John J. Chapman is, on the whole, a surer critic of the Concord prophet...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: "Literary History of America." | 12/3/1900 | See Source »

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