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

...members, will be held during the period. When the normal life of the College is resumed after the War a production will be made under the direction of one or more of the present officers and new officers and members elected immediately afterwards. Thus the organization will be kept intact...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: DRAMATIC CLUB SUSPENDS ACTIVITIES DURING WAR | 4/13/1918 | See Source »

...large expenditure necessary for the project is considered justifiable because it is felt that a school so well established as that at the University should be kept intact. All the available University buildings have already been taken over by the Radio School, but the space occupied is altogether inadequate for the needs...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: RADIO SCHOOL TO USE COMMON | 4/10/1918 | See Source »

...Service of the American Library Association which has been making the collection during the past week hopes that the books will continue to come in, as they will be needed as long as the war lasts, and the supply must be constantly replenished. All collection stations will be kept open indefinitely and the public is urged to form the habit of turning in their new books as soon as they have read them. More than a half-million volumes are needed at once in France and space has already been reserved in transports and freighters to send over thousands...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: OVER 2,200 BOOKS COLLECTED | 4/1/1918 | See Source »

...justly so. Unless the spirit of this year increases, however, a few may become less certain of the wisdom of the Harvard plan. The removal to Appleton offers a good opportunity to prove that it has been habit or a nice sense of the fitness of things which has kept many of us away from chapel...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: APPLETON CHAPEL OPENS | 3/29/1918 | See Source »

...have helped young men when they face that troublesome problem of choosing a life career. In very condensed form that advice is, to bear in mind that those interests and proclivities which one acquired spontaneously as a boy, outside of the schoolroom, and which one has more or less kept up or more or less neglected during the more exacting years of high-school and college, that those proclivities are still a part of oneself. They may be overlaid by the thoughts and habits instilled by the formal education, but they are there:--there as positive advantages if they...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Communication | 3/25/1918 | See Source »

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