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Word: classing (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1890-1899
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Usage:

Ninety-six members of the class of '89 have presented a mahogany cased clock to E.O. Storrow '89 as an expression of their appreciation of his services last spring in coaching the University crews...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Fact and Rumor. | 11/13/1899 | See Source »

...unusually large number of men are out for track athletics at Cornell. About one hundred and twenty-five candidates are in training for the University track team, as well as a large number for the class teams. The chief cause of this increase of interest is the fact that Cornell will send a team to the Olympian games at Paris next summer...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Fact and Rumor. | 11/13/1899 | See Source »

...Reverend Edward Chipman Gould '53, Dv. '57, died in Boston last Monday night. He was born in Brookline, Feb. 29, 1832. After studying for some time the Theological School at Andover, he entered Harvard College, a and graduated in 1853 in the same class with President Eliot, whose cousin he was. He then entered the Harvard Divinity school, graduating in 1857. Since then he has been pastor of a number of Unitarian churches, at Marietta, O., Baltimore, Md., Canton and Waltham, Mass., and later at Brunswick, Me., where he exercised a great influence over the students of Bowdoin College...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: OBITUARY | 11/11/1899 | See Source »

Major Samuel Quincy Robinson, U. S. A., died last Monday at Hot Springs, Art. He was a graduate of the Harvard Medical School in the class of 1876, after taking the degree of S. B. from Dartmouth College in 1872. he served as surgeon in the United States Army for several years...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: OBITUARY | 11/11/1899 | See Source »

...purpose. If the real world satisfies these conditions, it has individuality. Also, an individual expresses a purpose which no other individual can express. When a lover loves, he has but one object of his affections; yet in praising this object, he describes a type. Does he love a class of women or a single woman? If another had the same face, voice and inward sentiment as the one "perfect Woman," would he love both? If he did, he would have neither true love nor true loyalty, which, if he possessed, would hold him faithful to his one ideal...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Conception of Immortality by Professor Royce. | 11/11/1899 | See Source »

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