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

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 »

Alexander Harold Elder '07, of Somerville, Mass., the second speaker, prepared for College at the Cambridge High and Somerville Latin Schools. Although he took no active work in debating until his Junior year, this is his second University debate. Last fall he made his class team that defeated the Seniors, and in the spring he was a member of the team that defeated Yale. In the trials for the latter team he won the Coolidge Prize...

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

John Carroll Slade 3L., of Kelloggsville, N. Y., is the second speaker on the Yale team. He has won a number of prizes for high scholarship, and in his Senior year was president of Phi Beta Kappa. He also took honors in his second year at the Law School. This is the first time he has been on a debating team at Yale...

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

...sustained the listeners' interest from first to last. Inasmuch as the concert-givers are still students it would be hypercritical and unjust as well, to apply the more on less inflexible professional standard to their performance or to their original compositions. Yet in many respects both were of so high and thorough-going a standard as to compel both admiration and astonishment...

Author: By E. B. Hill ., | Title: Successful Musical Club Concert | 12/6/1906 | See Source »

...elevation of feeling and purity of style with such masterpieces as Goethe's "Iphigenia" or Sophocles' "Antigone." From the criticism of the New York papers it appears that Mr. Conried's company is this year particularly good, so that we may probably look forward to an artistic treat of high excellence. A large representation of Harvard students at the theatre is greatly to be desired, not only on account of th rare enjoyment which the performance will give to them, but also because Mr. Conried's generosity and unselfish interest in the Germanie Museum, for the benefit of which...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Communication | 12/4/1906 | See Source »

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