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

...leading article of the current Monthly is a serious and thoughtful essay on "Whistler and the Multitude" by L. Simonson. The author is mistaken, I think, in one of his main theses, that art has no message for the multitude; he is right if he limits himself to the Anglo-Saxon multitude, but wrong if he remembers the Italian; for example one of the most encouraging things in our American composite life is a Sunday afternoon visit to the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston. Mr. Simonson is wrong, too, in choosing the slashing style, in throwing other critics...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Review of the Current Monthly | 6/19/1907 | See Source »

...procession, led by the Class Day officers with the first marshal and the chairman of the Class Day Committee at the head, will march past Hollis and, crossing the Yard, go between Thayer and University to Appleton Chapel. On reaching the Chapel the procession will pass up the main aisle to the front. The Marshal and Chairman will then walk down the aisle dividing off the pairs into each pew. All will remain standing until the Marshal and Chairman have returned to their seats. After the services, the Seniors will pass out in the same order in which they entered...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: BACCALAUREATE SERMON | 6/15/1907 | See Source »

HARVARD CREW QUARTERS, RED TOP, CT., June 12, 1907.--The main feature of the crew practice here today was the decided shake-up in the University four-oar during the afternoon practice. The boat started about 5.15 o'clock with G. Bacon stroking instead of Lunt. After a mile C. Morgan replaced Amberg at number 3. In a short while Lunt was put in Swaim's place at number 2, and later Burchard replaced Wiggins at bow. The four-oar has not been doing satisfactory work, and Coach Wray has been paying especial attention to it. More changes are likely...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: SHAKE-UP IN FOUR OAR | 6/13/1907 | See Source »

...second noteworthy change is found in the tendency toward individual teaching. This is a fearfully expensive improvement, and is the main reason for the increasing cost of an education in this country. But perhaps the chief evidence of progress is found in the change in the matter of discipline and the form and spirit of government in the school...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Proposed Business Course | 6/3/1907 | See Source »

General Baron Kuroki, the distinguished Japanese soldier and commander of one of the main Japanese armies during the whole of the war with Russia, will visit the University today. Major Henry L. Higginson '55, representing the Corporation, will call on General Kuroki early in the morning, and after a call on the Governor at the State House, the party will visit the Medical School, the Stadium, and points of interest about Cambridge. At 1 o'clock the Corporation will entertain the visitors at luncheon in the Trophy Room of the Union. After luncheon, General Kuroki and his suite will visit...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: GEN. KUROKI IN CAMBRIDGE | 5/23/1907 | See Source »

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