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

...Every five years he receives $500 more until be reaches $5,500, the highest salary in the teaching force. As there are very few full professors less than 40 years of age, it will be seen that a teacher in Harvard cannot expect with normal promotion to earn $4,000 until he is over...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: PROFESSORS' SALARIES SCANTY | 1/26/1917 | See Source »

...permit them to vote for President in Massachusetts, if qualified elsewhere, should not pass without an obvious criticism. This matter of disqualification for voting by absence from one's normal voting place is a very serious matter, for not only students, but hundreds of thousands of men who earn their living by travelling, lose a vote enlightened by wider observation of conditions than is possible to their stay-at-home neighbors. But the solution does not lie in permitting them to vote wherever they may happen to be, even for President. The voters of Cambridge will on next Tuesday cast...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Communication | 11/3/1916 | See Source »

...fact that 1,000 students of the university at Syracuse, N. Y., are to earn their way this year in whole or in part, is calculated to awaken the envy of the country colleges, where the opportunities for self-help are limited by the environment. Educational institutions located in cities certainly have an advantage at this point. Men at the young Men's Christian Association College in this city, for earning money than the college boys in Amherst or Williamstown, despite the fact that special effort is made in both Williams and Amherst to get jobs for students who desire...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Student Self-Help. | 10/20/1916 | See Source »

...wants a congenial occupation, an occupation in which one may use all his faculties, one in which he may be useful to his fellow-men and at the same time earn his living, he should become a physician." "This profession," said Dr. F. C. Shattuck '68, in his lecture on medicine as a profession, "is one of the most fruitful occupations to which one can devote his life. Although the betterment of the processes of medicine has been great in the last thirty years, the full development of the science has only started...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: MEDICAL PROFESSION A CONGENIAL OCCUPATION | 3/23/1916 | See Source »

Many and various are the pursuits by which Columbia students earned last summer money amounting to $55,313. A report of P. C. Holter, chairman of the appointments committee of the institution, indicates that a willingness by students to turn any pleasure to financial account, aided them in increasing their earnings by $17,000 over those of the previous summer. Acting as companions to unfortunate possessors of wealth stands high among the places filled by the hard-working students. But playing pianos in summer hotels, working in drug stores, and even the questionable thrills of chauffering trolley cars were...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Columbia Students Earned $55,313 | 2/3/1916 | See Source »

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