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Word: joined (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
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Usage:

Although last night it could not be determined whether both the first and second Union Boat Club eights would join the University 150-pound navy in a race over the Henley distance in the Basin this afternoon, it is assumed by the coaches of the respective armadas that they would. The lightweight flotilla, which has been given light workouts during the first part of the week, is schedules to contend over the Henley tomorrow, in its last time-trial of the week. A recent shake-up has relegated John Wiggins, '33, and C. C. Campbell '33 to the second boat...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: CLASS CREW ROWS 1 3-4 MILE COURSE IN BASIN | 5/22/1931 | See Source »

...Class will join the Alumni Procession in the Yard and march to Sever Quadrangle for the Alumni Exercises which begin at 2.00. Wives and children will go direct to Sever Quadrangle where seats are reserved for them For the wives and children who do not wish to attend the Alumni Exercises, trips on the Charles River from the Weld Boat Club will be provided

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Plans for 1906 Class Reunion in June are Now Complete for Week of June 14 to 18--Spread is to be Held on June 16 | 5/20/1931 | See Source »

...mission was similar to that of the British party. Professor Wegener set out from his base last September to take supplies to two men who, like Courtauld, were stationed at a central observation camp on the ice cap. Professor Wegener never returned. Just as Capt. Ahrenberg was about to join the search last week, word was received from a relief expedition which had penetrated to the camp with a powerful portable radio. The occupants of the camp were alive and well-but Professor Wegener had started back to the base on Nov. 1. Hope for him was abandoned...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Aeronautics: Lost & Found | 5/18/1931 | See Source »

...decision of the Yale authorities to drop Latin and Greek from the list of compulsory subjects does not imply a desire to discourage classical studies. The son of Thomas Day Seymour, we may be sure, would not join in a movement in that direction. Yale is simply acting on a principle supported by many wise educators, who love their classics. The principle is that a student will derive little or no benefit from a study that is forced on him. The time given to distasteful work is wasted. Worse still, the student is kept from studies for which...

Author: By Boston Herald., | Title: Classics at Yale | 5/14/1931 | See Source »

Members of the University, both Faculty and undergraduate, who presume to join in the now nation-wide pastime of deducing relations of cause and effect from sets of statistics, will focus their attention on English and Economics when scanning the figures released yesterday by the Committee on the Choice of Electives with regard to Freshman concentrators. The upward trend in Economics, still numerical leader among the fields, has been cut short by a drop of 16, while the English department sees an increase of 31 in the number of men working under...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: TRENDS REVERSED | 5/13/1931 | See Source »

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