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Word: knowes (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1900-1909
Sort By: most recent first (reverse)


Usage:

...dinner will be held at the American House at 7 o'clock Tuesday evening, March 24. Tickets at $1.50 each are on sale at Leavitt's and at the Union, and it is hoped that members will purchase tickets as soon as possible in order that the committee may know at an early date how many men will be present. Men who have already purchased tickets of the sort sold at the Junior smoker should exchange them for new ones. As this is the last 1904 dinner before the final Commencement occasion next year it is hoped that every member...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Junior Dinner Notice. | 3/21/1903 | See Source »

...dinner will be held at the American House at 7 o'clock Tuesday evening, March 24. Tickets at $1.50 each are on sale at Leavitt's and at the Union, and it is hoped that members will purchase tickets as soon as possible in order that the committee may know at an early date how many men will be present. Men who have already purchased tickets of the sort sold at the Junior smoker should exchange them for new ones. As this is the last 1904 dinner before the final Commencement occasion next year it is hoped that every member...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Junior Dinner Notice. | 3/20/1903 | See Source »

...clock on Tuesday, March 24, not on Monday, March 23, as originally announced. Tickets at $1.50 each have been placed on sale at Leavitt's and at the Union, and it is hoped that members will purchase tickets as soon as possible in order that the committee may know at an early date how many will be present. Men who have already purchased tickets of the sort sold at the Junior smoker, should exchange them for new ones. As this is the last 1904 dinner before the final Commencement occasion next year, every member is urged to attend. Any member...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Junior Dinner Notice. | 3/17/1903 | See Source »

...this week at about nine o'clock, and proceeded to put two of their number through a set of vulgar performances utterly unrelieved even by the originality or wit which is sometimes supposed to atone for such infringements of the ordinary rules of good breeding. I do not know to what club or fraternity these men belong, but if a better argument were lacking for doing away with public initiations by those clubs to which age or other virtues may have given a certain prestige, such imitations of their ways as I saw last night ought to make us give...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Communication. | 1/30/1903 | See Source »

...unnecessary to those who have had no experience with class officers, and the basis of it may seem less real than imagined. To some of us, however, the chance has been given to see a concrete example of class administration which has pointed the way to an ideal. We know that a class officer can be the representative of the class as a body, while he also comes more and more to be the friend of each individual man. We have come to feel that a class should set this standard for its officers. Therefore, while it is much...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Communication. | 1/19/1903 | See Source »

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