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

...Christmas recess fails to register at the time set for that purpose, may be required to pay to the Bursar a fee of $5 before being permitted to register. Payment of this fee does not preclude action by the Administrative Board in the cases of students who register late...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Regulations for April Recess | 4/11/1914 | See Source »

...affecting. Its theme is a timely one, and recalls the candid words in which Mrs. Andrew W. White last year condemned "the neglect of the great body of women to study or practice economy, or to teach it to their daughters." The follies and crimes of men having of late been amply exposed, it now appears to be the turn of their better halves. Mr. Brock,--like Mr. Eugene Walters in "Fine Feathers," recently performed in Boston,--writes the tragedy of a wife's prodigality and deceitfulness. But Mr. Brock has excelled the professional author, who could not resist...

Author: By Ernest BERNBAUM ., | Title: MODERN TENDENCIES IN MONTHLY | 4/2/1914 | See Source »

...late meeting of the Corporation of Harvard College gifts to the University were announced amounting...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Recent Gifts to the University | 4/2/1914 | See Source »

...will of the late Judge Addison Brown, of New York, Harvard University receives a bequest of $10,000 to be applied as follows: "$7,500 thereof in founding a scholarship bearing the name 'Addison Brown,' the income thereof to be applied toward paying the expenses of some needy meritorious undergraduate student to be designated by the College under prescribed regulations; the remaining $2,500 of said $10,000 legacy in establishing a Prize Fund bearing the name 'Addison Brown' in the Dane Law School, now known as the Harvard Law School, the income thereof to be awarded annually or biennally...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Recent Gifts to the University | 4/2/1914 | See Source »

Secondarily, it may be done by reaching those men who might enjoy chapel, if they realized its nature, but who, because of natural inertia, do not go at all or until late in their college careers. Under ordinary circumstances the plan of requiring the attendance of Freshmen at chapel once a week during the first two or three months of their course would be worth trying. It would hamper their freedom little, and might open the eyes of many. But the world that knows Harvard has grown very nervous in the last few years at the tendency toward paternalism...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE UNWISDOM OF COMPULSORY CHAPEL. | 4/2/1914 | See Source »

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