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

...Markham Akin, of St. Louis, Mo.; George Carey Barclay, of New York, N. Y.; Hugh Bridgman, of Salem; Chester William Cook, of Worcester; Phillip Henry Currier, of Wellesley Hills; Stillman Roberts Dun-ham, Jr., of Allston; Paul Blodgett Elliott, of Dorchester; Frederick Taylor Fisher, of Chicago, Ill.; Abram Waldo French, of West Newton; Robert Ells-worth Gross, of West Newton; Joseph Henry Poett Howard, of Chester, N. S.; William Coit Hubbard, of Chicago, Ill.; Royal Little, of Brookline; Francis Parkman, of Boston; Howard Pratt Perry, of Newton Centre; William Henry Potter, Jr., of Watertown; Horatio Rogers, of Chestnut Hill; Quentin...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: 1919 COMMITTEES ANNOUNCED | 11/23/1916 | See Source »

...their new honors. Dr. Wendell, who is professor of English Literature at Harvard, is distinguished as a writer, critic and lecturer. Gari MeIchers is an American artist who is hardly known here, although he has been much honored abroad. Dr. Wendell as a lecturer at the Sobonne and other French universities, represented this country and was duly appreciated in France, although he had until yesterday received no substantial recognition here. The same is true of MeIchers. The very existence of such a body as the American Academy, and the recognition it accorded the two new members, does something toward removing...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Professor Wendell a New Immortal. | 11/22/1916 | See Source »

...information bureau of the American Ambulance Field Service will open its office in Grays 17 this afternoon from 4 until 6 o'clock. Members of the committee which is composed of those who have driven ambulances with the French field armies will be on hand each afternoon to see all men interested in the work and to supply information regarding...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: AMBULANCE CORPS NEEDS MEN | 11/21/1916 | See Source »

...rare opportunity to college men to take a useful part in the war. It makes no pretense of being neutral but requires its members to be openly loyal to the cause of the Allies. Motor ambulances, in sections of 25 cars, are attached to various divisions of the French armies and do the work of the regular military field ambulances. Since the war began the cars have been used at the battle of the Marne, at Ypres during the great second battle, and along the Yser Canal, on the Somme, at Verdun, at Hartmansweilerkopf, in Alsace and in the Balkans...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: AMBULANCE CORPS NEEDS MEN | 11/21/1916 | See Source »

...liked most of all the reception which I gave to the students of Harvard the other afternoon." At that time Madame Bernhardt was greeted by Professor. Louis Al lard, who expressed the University's appreciation of her visit to this country at so critical a period to interpret the French...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: U. S. RELIEF WORK PRAISED | 11/20/1916 | See Source »

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