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Word: fifteenth (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Beebe '27, one of Harvard's most fruitful undergraduate authors, has found its way into print. "Francois Villon Certain Aspects, is the name of the new work, which has just appeared in a limited edition. It is a critical essay on Villon's place in French poetry of the fifteenth century, and an estimate of his influence on subsequent French versifiers...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: BEEBE AGAIN IN PRINT AS CRITIC OF FRENCH POET | 12/18/1925 | See Source »

...exhibition of recent gifts to the department of Fine Arts is now open to the public in the Print Room of the Fogg Art Museum. The prints shown date from the fifteenth century to the present day, and include the work of German, Netherlandish, Italian, Spanish, French, and American masters...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: RECENT GIFTS TO FINE ARTS DEPARTMENT NOW ON DISPLAY | 12/16/1925 | See Source »

...training of football teams shall not begin at the University or elsewhere prior to September fifteenth in any academic year...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: MUCH DISCUSSED FOOTBALL AGREEMENT IS REPRINTED TO ENLIGHTEN STUDENTS | 10/27/1925 | See Source »

This champion of the unprized causes builds like his Fifteenth Century model a policy for political progress on the firm conviction that the voice of the people is but the echo of those who lead them. In short, he caricatures democracy by giving the face of that goddess a Roman nose and by handing her a club, labeled "bunkum". And to those who delight in the raucous ribaldry of Mr. Mencken, and even to those who parade the pageant of their political pessimism a with perennial precision, these words seem the utterances of an oracle. Yet an oracle can have...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: MENCKEN'S MENTAL MARIBOU'S | 10/19/1925 | See Source »

...that this phase of American architecture was a product of the Catholic revival of the twentieth century, but such hasty conclusions must now be discarded, for the magnificent Gothic ruins at Newhaven indubitably attest the existence of a flourishing scholastic culture as early as the first years of the fifteenth century. Henceforth we must antedate the permanent colonization of the so-called New World by at least a hundred years, unless we blind ourselves to such minute and convincing proofs as these...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: HISTORY OF ABORIGINAL AMERICANS IS RECOUNTED BY UNION ESSAYIST FROM VIEWPOINT OF SCIENTISTS IN FUTURE AGES | 6/5/1925 | See Source »

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