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Word: loree (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1929
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Usage:

...Prominent among these are Associate Professor C. T. Copeland '82, Professor A. N. Holcombe '06, Dean H. W. Holmes '03, Professor B. S. Hurlbut '87, Assistant Professor L. J. A. Mercier, Professor W. B. Munro '99, Professor W. J. V. Osterhout, and Professor G. H. Parker '87,, Professor Dallas Lore Sharp of Boston University, known for his articles on Education in the Atlantic Monthly, and Professor John Paten Marshall of Boston University, well known as a critic of music, are also on the staff...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: EXCEPT EXTENSION COURSES ENROLLMENT TO BE NEARLY 2000 | 9/26/1921 | See Source »

Hving used Mr. Carey's "Mr. Hooker Sells an antique" to illustrate a general defect in all the prose, he will feel ill-treated at this point. These few defects, however, illuminate the general merit of his story. HE has used a knowledge of the lore of antiques in a pleasing manner to set in relief a variety of humbug pervading the traffic in them. One feels a little as though he has been accustomed to writing for an audience to whom quaintness was prime virtue and formal antiquity the breath of life. His story is by far the best...

Author: By Francis H. Soheetz l., | Title: MAY ADVOCATE FREE FROM AFFECTATION | 5/21/1921 | See Source »

Take "Le Malade Imaginaire" from the theatre of Moliere or any other play on the wiles of the hypochondriac. Tap the vein of comedy that ran through "The Molluse' of blessed memory. Add a smattering from the lore of the psychoanalyst. Stir violently and you will have the deft, original and uncommonly entertaining piece which, under the clumsy and inept title of "Mamma's Affair," arrived last evening at the reopened Little Theatre...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: NEW YORK CRITICS GREET MOROSCO PRIZE PLAY, "MAMMA'S AFFAIR," WITH UNBRIDLED PRAISE | 1/24/1920 | See Source »

...head and shoulders above the latter in acquiring academic honors is indisputably shown by statistics published in the December Graduates' Magazine. But the statistician went no further. He merely shrugged his shoulders, said "Judge for yourself," and left the private schools to rest on their laurels. Whereupon Professor Dallas Lore Sharp and the editorial columns of numerous papers proceeded to pass sentence of death upon our endowed secondary institutions...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: A WORD FOR THE PRIVATE SCHOOL | 1/14/1920 | See Source »

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