Search Details

Word: hand (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1900-1909
Sort By: most recent first (reverse)


Usage:

...convenient for most students to reach the region of Jarvis than to go down to Soldiers Field, and it is very doubtful if as many would take advantage of the courts if situated across the river as would be likely to do so if they were placed closer at hand...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Communication. | 12/11/1902 | See Source »

...very little space has been cleared of the snow. The pond may be reached by taking a Huron avenue car from Harvard square to the junction of Huron and Concord avenues and walking down Concord avenue past the Boston and Albany railroad tracks. The pond lies on the right hand side of the road about 100 yards from the tracks...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Skating at Artificial. | 12/9/1902 | See Source »

Much of the verse, on the other hand, is graceful, dignified and highly suggestive. "The Kingdom, the Power and the Glory," read before the Phi Beta Kappa in 1898, is perhaps the best work in the book. The moral it teaches might be remembered to great advantage today by many of those in quest of the strenuous life. One bit, in a description of a recent Harvard-Yale football game, seems at this time particularly apropos...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Book Review. | 12/6/1902 | See Source »

...actions as a revenge upon the one who he says wished to deceive him and assumed Lucrece's name to talk to him on the previous evening. His love has always been given to the real Lucrece, and his father is persuaded to make a formal demand for her hand...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Cercle Francais Play. | 12/3/1902 | See Source »

...learned to assist one-another. When the ball was to be advanced, it was the man who carried it that did most of the work, and though there were gains, some of them of considerable length, they were due almost entirely to individual excellence. On the other hand, the efforts of the man who carried the ball for Yale were but secondary in the attainment of the end. Every play in which Yale attempted to advance the ball brought out the combined strength of every man on the team and it was by their concentrated energies that they achieved that...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: YALE, 23; HARVARD, 0 | 11/24/1902 | See Source »

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