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

...appreciate least an over-exuberant reception. Healthy pride leads to healthy praise, which should never be made insincere by violent lapses into epicurean orgies. The spirit of the evening should be the spirit of Dean Briggs' toasts, and praise be to him who rises to them with a full heart instead of an over-full stomach...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE DINNER TONIGHT. | 12/11/1914 | See Source »

...from Coach Haughton's speech at the mass meeting last night. He guaranteed that the players will do their part if the other undergraduates do theirs. Today's parade gives an opportunity for the display of the sort of enthusiasm Coach Haughton has asked for--the sort that puts heart into a team. Every man who can should be in the parade. A class is the only engagement that should prevent a man from marching. The team must leave for New Haven knowing that it is not making its fight alone, but that an enthusiastically loyal student body is behind...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: TODAY'S PARADE. | 11/18/1914 | See Source »

During the week beginning next Monday, Dr. Thomas Lewis, assistant physician and lecturer on Cardiac Pathology in the University College Hospital of London, and an editor of "Heart," an important medical journal, will come to Boston as visiting physician, pro tem., at the Peter Bent Brigham Hospital and visiting lecturer in Medicine at the University. This practice was inaugurated last year when Dr. William S. Thayer, of Johns Hopkins, spent a week here as visiting physician. The local scheme of instruction thus acquires the services of distinguished men who give various student exercises and afford the Medical School...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: PROMINENT VISITING PHYSICIAN | 10/23/1914 | See Source »

Arvin E. Case '17 was recently the victim of a fatal accident at North Sutton, N. H. While alone on a lake near by, he was suddenly seized with a violent attack of heart disease. Unable to save himself, he toppled into the water and, before friends from shore could reach him, drowned...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Obituary | 10/8/1914 | See Source »

...Penelope" is by far the longest flight; and it is well sustained. The poet's observation of the scenic world is close and sympathetic, and it is matched by considerable skill of descriptive phrase. Of briefer compass, the lyrics are not without charm, notably, "Weitschmerz," "The Vision of Heart's Delight," and "Laughter and the Rain." The ethical impulse is strong in the author; but it is genuinely striving, not without success, to utter itself in forms of beauty. These verses fall short ultimately not because they are "badly expressed," for they are not; rather the lack is that there...

Author: By Carleton NOYES ., | Title: "FIRST FRUITS."--BUTLER-THWING | 6/13/1914 | See Source »

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