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Word: loree (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1900-1909
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Usage:

...Woods '87 will speak on "Customs of Prohibiting Food" at the meeting of the American Folk-Lore Society to be held at 1755 Beacon street, Brookline, this evening at 8.30. Professor F. W. Putnam '62 will preside...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Fact and Rumor. | 4/22/1902 | See Source »

...Thursday, January 2, inclusive. They are the American Society of Naturalists, the American Morphology Society, the Association of American Anatomists, the American Physiological Society, the American Psychological Society, the Western Philosophical Society, the Society of American Bacteriologists, the Botanists of the Central and Western States, and the American Folk Lore Society. Ten or twelve Harvard representatives will probably attend, and among them Professor Josiah Royce, President of the American Psychological Society, who will deliver the presidential address on "The Relations between Psychology and Logic...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Conventions During the Recess. | 12/20/1901 | See Source »

Dallas Dayton Lore McGrew '03 substitute fullback, prepared at the University School, Oleveland. He played left tackle on his Freshman eleven and was on the University squad last year. He is 20 years old, weighs 175 pounds and is 6 feet 1 1-2 inches tall...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Harvard Team Statistics. | 11/23/1901 | See Source »

There are in all thirty fables in the Talmud which have come down in Esop's Fables, until now they are well known folk-lore. In looking at the original source of the fables we find that they came first from India. Then they were taken up by the Greeks, including Esop, and by them handed down to the Romans. Of the 30 fables of the Talmud, 18 can be traced to Classic and Indian origin and 5 to the purely Indian. The remainder are of later growth and of purely Talmudic origin...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Last Semitic Lecture. | 3/7/1901 | See Source »

...meeting of the American Historical Association in Detroit on Dec. 27, Prof. A. C. Coolidge and Mr. A. L. P. Dennis of Harvard spoke on the various aspects of the crusades. The American Folk Lore Society met with the American Society of Nationalists and associated societies at the Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore Dec. 28. Officers were elected for the ensuing year as follows: President, Dr. Frank Russell, Harvard: first vice-president. Professor Livingston Ferrand, Columbia: second vice-president. Dr. G. A. Dorsey, Field Columbian Museum, Chicago; councillors Dr. R. B. Dixon, Harvard; Mr. S. Hagar, Brooklyn...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Sessions of Learned Societies. | 1/3/1901 | See Source »

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