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

...choose the Freshman debating teams to participate in a freshman triangular debate with Yale and Princeton on May 5, held on Saturday, nine men were retained. These were divided into two squads of six regular men and three substitutes. No division into final teams was made. The first group of six men from which the teams will later be chosen is composed of the following: F. F. Greenman, I. Levin, H. C. Place, R. L. West, I. Witkin, S. F. Withe. The substitutes are N. H. Brodsky, S. Z. Kaplan, G. V. Seldes...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Final 1914 Debating Trials | 4/10/1911 | See Source »

...Division of Anthropology the clause requiring "Four courses in Anthropology in the middle of the upper group" will be changed to read simply "Four courses in Anthropology"; and instead of the clause requiring "Three courses in the middle or the upper group, chosen from a list of selected courses in Semitic, Indic Philology, Comparative Philology, German, History of Religions, Philology, Architecture, Zoology, and Geology" will be substituted "four courses in related subjects, of which three must be courses not regularly open to Freshmen...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: DEGREES WITH DISTINCTION | 4/6/1911 | See Source »

Professor Bliss Perry, of the department of English, will leave today for a trip to Texas, to be gone until after the spring recess. A group of Harvard graduates in Texas were desirous of having a member of the Faculty make the trip to speak at several institutions, and Professor Perry has been asked to go. He will make speeches at Austin College, Baylor University, the University of Texas, the San Antonio Public Library, the Galveston Public Library and before the school teachers of Houston. In addition to this he will informally address the Harvard Clubs of Dallas and Galveston...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Prof. Bliss Perry Leaves for Texas | 4/4/1911 | See Source »

...provide a natural opportunity for men from the different colleges to meet for unhurried consideration, in especially agreeable surroundings, of the vital significance of Christianity for the colleges and for the college man in his various callings. The daily program includes two meetings of all the delegations, group classes for Bible study, mission study, or study of social problems, and larger group conferences on life work. The afternoons are given over entirely to recreation; an intercollegiate baseball series, a tennis tournament and a track meet are among the diversions arranged...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Annual Northfield Conference June 23 | 4/1/1911 | See Source »

...speaker until last year, when I went with some misgivings and reluctance. But I then discovered that my impressions of the conference had little foundation in fact. I found a joyous, delightfully vigorous and magnetic atmosphere. The men from the various schools and colleges were a selected group, frankly and earnestly religious, but normally and intelligently so. The speaking was for the most part excellent; there was plenty of sport and recreation mingled with the Bible study and devotional meetings. I think every man who was there was glad that he had come and was the better and bigger...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Northfield Student Conference. | 4/1/1911 | See Source »

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