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

...following books have been added to the Union library during the past week: "Checkers," Blossom; "With the Empress Dowager," Carl: "A Thief in the Night," Hornung; "Character of Renaissance Architecture," Moore; "Jules of the Great Heart," Mott '05; "Back Home," Wood; "Football for Player and Spectator," Yost...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Books Received by Union Library | 11/21/1905 | See Source »

...Barber, who has been in India for six years, is secretary of the Y. M. C. A. building in the heart of the constituency of Calcutta University, and knows intimately university life in India. He is well acquainted with the work of E. C. Carter '00, who left here in October, 1902, and who is now supported partly by contributions from Harvard graduates and undergraduates in the Christian Association...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Talk on India and E. C. Carter '00 | 11/8/1905 | See Source »

Phillips Brooks House will be open tomorrow afternoon from 2 to 6 o'clock, and members of the University are invited to come there during the afternoon. at about 3 o'clock, Mr. C. T. Copeland will read from "Jules of the Great Heart," by L. Mott '05, and K. S. Cate '09 will play the violin...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Mr. Copeland in Brooks House | 11/4/1905 | See Source »

James Buren Higgins sL., of Indianapolis, died of rheumatism of the heart at 3 o'clock Sunday morning at the Stillman Infirmary after an intermittent illness of one month. Higgins graduated from Princeton in 1903. Since entering the Law School in the fall of the same year, he had been a member of the Holmes Law Club...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Obituary | 5/23/1905 | See Source »

...narrow and personal success, and with danger of giving him ideas on the subject that are radically wrong. Life has many activities, and men should be educated to take an intelligent interest in political and educational problems. "We are specialists," says Professor Munsterberg, "in our handiwork, but our heart-work, is uniform, and the demand for individualized education ignores the great similarities." The system of education which produces this uniformity of interests must be under the direction of an experienced faculty. Such a system is being organized at Princeton, and already exists in slightly altered forms at Yale, Columbia...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: PRINCETON WON THE DEBATE | 3/29/1905 | See Source »

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