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Word: ear (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
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January 18.--Dr. D. C. Greene '95, "Disorders of the Ear, Nose and Throat--Prevention of Colds...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Five Medical Lectures in Union | 1/11/1916 | See Source »

...surgeons who comprise a surgical staff, a medical staff, dentists, and specialists in the eye and ear; the 36 graduate nurses who will supplement a corps of nurses who remained in Europe after the return of the first Unit, will complete the party. The Unit has been resulted on a basis of six months' service, but as some of the doctors will be unable to stay so long, their places will be filled as they return...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: MEDICAL UNIT REACHED ENGLAND | 11/30/1915 | See Source »

...Union will conduct a series of five short medical lectures on topics of general and universal interest by the more prominent physicians of Boston during the coming winter. These lectures will deal with the nose, throat, and ear, and their relation to colds; the care of the teeth; the care of the eye; the digestion; and with the proper amount and kind of exercise necessary to preserve health...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Union Plans for Series of Short Medical Lectures | 11/22/1915 | See Source »

...curious belief is prevalent, especially among men who have never attended an operatic performance, that in order to enjoy the opera one must be gifted with extraordinary musical talent. But in fact, the opera, combining as it does music and drama, thus furnishing aesthetic enjoyment not only to the ear but to the eye, presents a far easier opportunity to the so-called unmusical to enjoy music, than does a concert or recital. By going to an opera and flixng his attention on the dramatic element, as he would in the case of an ordinary play, the man who knows...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: AN ENORMOUS DECLINE. | 11/18/1915 | See Source »

...After a Little While" has in its careful workmanship a great advantage over the unrhymed productions of Mr. B. P. Clark and Mr. Boyden. These gentlemen should realize that free verse is not an easy way out of the bondage of fixed metres, but requires an even finer ear for rhythm, and should compensate for the absence of regularity of account and rhyme by still subtler musical' effects. What they give us is rather vague prose, spoiled by inversions. Mr. Denison's "Sonnet" has a good tenth line spoiled by an unmetrical eleventh, and is somewhat over-weighted...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Verse Feature of Current Advocate | 10/28/1915 | See Source »

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