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

...Rantoul '92, 2, Perkins '91; bow, Newell '94; coxswain, Battelle '93; substitutes. Jones '92; Watriss '92; Burgess '93; Coach, H. W. Keyes; president of H. U. B. C., Brooks '91; manager, Pierce '93, and Mr. Geo. Pierce, Proctor for examinations, are the men who live and eat with the crew. Examinations finish here today and relieves the men of an anxiety which is noticeable in the rowing...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: From New London. | 6/19/1891 | See Source »

...plan on which the boarding house will be run will allow private tables to eat there; and it is expected that a considerable number will take advantage of it. It is thought that this plan will secure better food and more satisfactory accommodations and service at a lower rate of expenditure than if the teams contracted separately with various boarding house keepers...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Harvard Training Association. | 3/17/1891 | See Source »

...arising from the cooking of food for seven hundred men, and the hurry and disorder of its distribution, make the hall now only endurable because it is cheap. Most men are obliged to board at the cheapest place, but that is no reason why they should be forced into eating in the midst of nearly all imaginable discomforts. And, moreover, it is only putting off the difficulty for a short time; the strain on the resources of the University will be just as great when, in a short time, the number of men here has increased according to President Eliot...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 11/20/1890 | See Source »

...great dislike to speak on temperance questions, and a greater dislike to refuse to speak; that he was not a prohibitionist; that he denied the right of any man or body of men to prescribe to any other man or body of men what they should or should not eat, drink or wear. There are several undisputed facts which bear on the temperance problem. First, alcohol and distilled liquors are poisonous and not foods; second, wines and other fermented liquors are not foods in the ordinary sense of the term, and neither serve to build up issues nor to warm...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Dr. Lyman Abbott's Lecture. | 11/7/1890 | See Source »

...much as this, because the management of the Hall is purely and solely a business matter. After having been a member and gone through the grind for four years, one appreciates the immense importance, for health and work and fun, of having one's food at least eat eatable. Before Mr. Darling's administration it was not even this...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Communication. | 4/22/1890 | See Source »

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