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

Deturs will be awarded to men who have won positions in the first group and who have never received a detur. These deturs are books purchased with the income of a funil established by Edward Honkins, who was born in 1600. The books are bound in red leather with the seal of the University stamped in gold on the cover...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Award of Academic Distinctions | 12/10/1906 | See Source »

Fenry Hurwitz '08, the first speaker on the University team, comes from Gloucester, Mass., where he prepared at the local High School. He was a first-group scholar in his Freshman and Sophomore years, but this is the first time he has made a debating team in the University. In the trials for the team he won the Coolidge Prize...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: DEBATE WITH YALE TONIGHT | 12/7/1906 | See Source »

...Group II--Where tickets are not for personal use, Class I will include applications for one or two seats. Class II will include applications for three or four seats...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Application for Yale Game Seats | 11/3/1906 | See Source »

...cheering section; 6. If a man desires more seats then he is entitled to upon his individual application he may use the application of another man, provided written authority to do so is attached to the application. Tickets assigned on such borrowed application will be placed in Group II. Where a personal application, and a borrowed application are enclosed together, tickets for both will be assigned in Group II. 7. Persons wishing to sit together may enclose their applications together; 8. Remittances may be made by check, express money order, or post-office money order, and should...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Application for Yale Game Seats | 11/3/1906 | See Source »

This pulpit, which is one of the finest monuments of mediaevel scupture, is an imposing and massive structure, some fifteen feet high, resting on Romanesque columns and richly adorned with high reliefs of singular power and beauty. Together with the colossal Crucifixion group from the Rood Screen of the same church and the monumental bronze gates of Augsburg Cathedral, which the Germanic Museum has just acquired, this gift of the King of Saxony is a highly important illustration of the remarkable state of perfection reached by German sculpture at the end of the twelfth and the beginning of the thirteenth...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Saxon Gift for Germanic Museum | 11/3/1906 | See Source »

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