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Word: demand (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
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Usage:

...decorated with bay and spruce trees, Japanese lanterns, etc.; and boxes to hold from three to seven couples will be constructed and appropriately decorated. "Fusser's Delight," a section at the extreme west of the Delta, will be enlarged this year so as to meet the expected demand. An orchestra in the hall will alternate with a band on the Delta, so there a will always be something doing from 8 to 1. There will be no supper dance as refreshments will be served in the boxes from...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Senior Class Notice | 5/18/1912 | See Source »

Everyone graduating from Harvard knows of the increasing demand throughout American towns and cities for broadminded and intelligent men to assume some share of responsibility in the political or social welfare of these communities. A representative university like Harvard is always ready to aid in securing positions in such a field of progressive activity; and there is no time a man appreciates more keenly what his college stands for than at the end of the Senior year. Association in any of the work to be outlined by the speakers means sacrificing only a few hours each month...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: OPPORTUNITIES AFTER GRADUATION. | 5/16/1912 | See Source »

...this spring, complaints have already reached our ears that apparently school boys have been using the available courts while Harvard men have had to wait their turn. There is no particular reason why school boys should not use the courts at times when there is no other demand for them, but from now to Commencement surely there will be a constant demand for the courts by students of the University. These students, through membership in the Athletic Association, are the owners of the courts and are therefore entitled to preference in their...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: SCIENTIFIC MANAGEMENT OF THE TENNIS COURTS | 4/29/1912 | See Source »

Regarding the urgent problems confronting the country now, Senator Beveridge suggested three which demand a man of Roosevelt's calibre for their solution. Protective tariff rates must be substituted for extortionate rates; business laws three hundred years old must be modernized; the government must be taken from the bosses and placed in the hands of the people. The time is ripe for action and it remains for the country to choose the man who will see these policies through...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: ROOSEVELT AS A CANDIDATE | 4/23/1912 | See Source »

...issue an illustrated lecture by Professor A. Lawrence Rotch, of the department of Geology, to be given in the Living Room of the Union tomorrow evening. We wish to call the attention of Union members to this lecture for two reasons. First, there has been lately an increasing demand on the part of undergraduates for more public lectures by members of the Harvard Faculty, and the CRIMSON has frequently urged that more lectures be given in the Union by such men. In the second place, the attendance at some of the lectures recently given in the Union has been very...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: AN OPPORTUNITY. | 3/11/1912 | See Source »

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