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Word: hector (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1929
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Usage:

...Marion A. Cheek, Mrs. Charles F. Darlington, Mrs. George E. Debevoise, Mrs. Henry C. Dyer, Mrs. William B. O. Field, Mrs. John R. Fordyce, Mrs. Hollis French, Mrs. Thomas B. M. Gates, Mrs. Percy B. Gibson, Mrs. Thomas H. Halsted. Mrs. Charles L. Harding, Mrs. George Hogue, Mrs. Hector J. Hughes, Mrs. Lewis Iselin, Mrs. Henry A. Jones, Mrs. Samuel T. Jones, Mrs. John K. Kane, Mrs. Louis W. Ladd, Mrs. Charles W. Leavitt, Mrs. David M. Little, Mrs. A. Lawrence Lowell...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: LOWE'S ORCHESTRA WILL PLAY AT SENIOR SPREAD | 6/2/1926 | See Source »

...Author. Hector St. John Crèvecoeur, born in Caen, France, in 1735, served under Montcalm, and turned his back on Canada after the fall of Quebec. Surveyor, mapmaker, soldier, negotiator with the Indians, he settled down as a farmer, after his marriage, in the province of New York. He "suffered much for his attachment to his Majesty's government and friends," was driven from his farm and became a refugee, protected with others of his kind by Clinton's army, until 1870, when he returned to France. After the war France sent him to America as consul...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Non-Fiction | 2/1/1926 | See Source »

...would badger, dun, and hector...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE CRIME | 10/15/1925 | See Source »

...Wellington, N. Z., Prof. A. C. Gifford of the Hector Observatory is something of a cat. The lunar mice, he suggested last week, are meteors. Others have believed that the multitude of craters on the moon's surface are the chilly orifices of extinct volcanoes, mementoes of the aeons just after the moon, a molten fragment, was flung off from the earth's mass, arrested in the heavens by the pull of terrestrial gravity and started in its perpetual monthly swing. Prof. Gifford's contention is that, since the moon has no appreciable enveloping atmosphere, a meteor...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Moon Pits | 6/15/1925 | See Source »

Engineering Sciences as a field of concentration are discussed in the following article written especially for the Crimson by Dean Hector James Hughes '94 of the Engineering School. This article is the fifth of a series which the Crimson is publishing to supplement a pamphlet on she choice of a field of concentration which was published in 1922. Dean Hughes in this article discusses particularly the courses which a student in the College who intends to take up engineering after graduation should take...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: DEAN HUGHES DESCRIBES ENGINEERING EDUCATION | 6/3/1925 | See Source »

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