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Word: fifteenth (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1900-1909
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Usage:

...Harvard Teachers' Association will hold its fifteenth annual meeting in the New Lecture Hall on Saturday morning, March 3, at 9,30 o'clock. J. F. Moors '83, president of the Boston Public School Association, and J. P. Munroe, president of the Reform Club of Boston, will address the Association on "The Joint Educational Responsibility of the School and the Community." The discussion which will follow will be led by J. J. Storrow '85, chairman of the Boston School Committee. The meeting will be open to the public...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Teacher's Asso. Meeting March 3 | 2/24/1906 | See Source »

...volume was prepared with particular care after an Italian model of the fifteenth century, and is a very fine specimen of the bookbinders...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Memorial Volume to Prof. Norton | 12/18/1905 | See Source »

Programs, at 20 cents each, and all information about the meeting may be had from Mr. C. D. Atkins, 111 South Fifteenth street, Philadelphia...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Summer Meeting at Oxford University | 5/13/1905 | See Source »

...fifteenth annual tournament for the interscholastic lawn tennis championship in singles will be held under the auspices of the Lawn Tennis Association on Saturday, May 6, and Monday, May 8, on Jarvis Field. The school winning the greatest number of matches will receive a shield, and first and second individual prizes will be awarded. As Harvard intercollegiate champion the winner of the tournament will be eligible to enter the national interscholastic championship at Newport next August. Each entrant will be charged $1 and each school represented will be required to pay the annual dues of $5, but the number...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Interscholastic Tennis Tournament | 4/14/1905 | See Source »

...Sandys graphically described the homes of the Italian humanists--the scholars of the Renaissance--by taking his audience in an imaginary journey through the principal Italian cities of the fifteenth century. Leaving Florence we enter Venice, the portal through which Greek literature passed from the East to the West, and crossing back to the mainland, we proceed to the stately city of Parma. To the humanists it was a place of transient rather than of permanent abode, yet its interest in the classics was exemplified in 1413 by the sensation created there over the alleged discovery of the bones...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: "The Homes of Humanism" | 4/4/1905 | See Source »

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