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Word: late (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1880-1889
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Usage:

...late Bishop Alfred Lee was born in 1807 in the historic Cambridge mansion immortalized by Longfellow in "The old House by the Lindens" and graduated at Harvard...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Fact and Rumor. | 4/26/1887 | See Source »

...WHIPPLE.GLEE CLUB. - Rehearsal with Mr. Locke this evening at 7.30. Those coming more than five minutes late will be fined twenty-five cents...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Notices. | 4/25/1887 | See Source »

...lack of promptness in the attendance at lectures - and especially nine o'clock lectures - has become an evil which can no longer be overlooked. There can be no doubt that the abolition of compulsory chapel has been the cause of much of the late coming to nine o'clock recitations. If the privilege of late attendance is certainly great and one, which if in its exercise it affected the late-comers only, would be a personal affair, admitting of no public discussion. But where the privilege of a few becomes the disturbance of many, the instructor as well...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 4/23/1887 | See Source »

...that opprobrium is heaped upon one who does testify, however right he and his friends may consider his case to be, has been recently illustrated by the very events which indirectly led to the complication of a court trial, and the student whose testimony figured somewhat in the late trial was exempt from criticism by those who are usually disposed to shield wrong doing at all hazards, only because of his uniformly courteous bearing towards his fellow students, the high respect which his general course in college has gained for him, and because his testimony was not volunteered...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: College Discipline. | 4/20/1887 | See Source »

...forty-first annual report of the director of Harvard College Observatory, laid before the board of trustees early in the present year, Prof. Pickering states that the munificence of the late Robert Treat Paine has now begun to provide the encouragement which he desired to give to the science of astronomy; the sum of $165,000, comprising about half of his bequest, having been received by the treasurer of the University, and the income therefrom being already available for the support of work at the Observatory. The addition of this fund to those previously available raises the endowment...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Harvard Observatory. | 4/19/1887 | See Source »

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