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

...Employment Bureau, with offices in University Hall, which handles candidates for teachers' positions; the Alumni Association, with an office in Boston, which handles candidates for business positions of every description; and the newly founded bureau of the Harvard Club of New York, which likewise deals with candidates for every kind of business position. These three together have, for the year of 1913-14, helped 144 men to positions all over the country and even abroad, with an average salary of $1,055 a year. Not only are men helped to find employment, but records are kept of those...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: POSITIONS FOR GRADUATES. | 3/31/1915 | See Source »

...already far ahead of us, since both have held winter practice and have made plans for a long spring drill. Harvard's practice lasts exactly eighteen days. If we wish to be in the race next fall, we must start immediately, as championships are won only by the hardest kind of work. Thus, it is imperative that more candidates report for spring practice...

Author: By W. MINOT ., | Title: More Candidates for Football | 3/30/1915 | See Source »

...date for the first-year law smoker has been set for April 9, and, according to present plans, it will be held in the Harvard Club of Boston. This is the first entertainment of the kind that the first-year men have ever had and the committee is endeavoring to arrange an unusually entertaining program. Original talent from the class together with speeches by Dean Thayer and some of the professors will make up the evening's entertainment. An original double quartet has been gotten together on which are former Glee Club men from six universities...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: FIRST-YEAR SMOKER PLANNED | 3/17/1915 | See Source »

...modern wars. Thus, also, just to the extent that they succeed in the purpose for which they were founded, will the Summer Training Camps stifle the university man's belief in the chance for peace now and today. The man who served in an army reserve of any kind may believe he is thoroughly anti-militarist in spirit, but the insurance in which he invests is always of one kind,--a little bigger and a little stronger army or navy; he is never the man who will be found taking difinite steps forward on the only path which can ever...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE MENACE OF MILITARY CAMPS. | 3/15/1915 | See Source »

...critic's reaction. A commendable editorial, a pleasant book notice (hardly review), and Frederick Robinson's reaction on the "New Intoxication" complete the non-fictional prose. The last appears to miss in the phrase "the new intoxication" an implied criticism of all religion that it partakes of a kind of divine phrensy not reconciled to sober reason...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Monthly Offers Well Varied Number | 3/13/1915 | See Source »

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