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

...very glad to hear that your class is contemplating the creation of a gate to the College Yard in memory of the men of your class who fell in the war. Bit by bit the Yard is being beautified but much remains to be done, and I can think of no more fitting nor permanent memorial, of a modest but apt sort than the addition of a monumental portal to the Yard fence, now so nearly complete. Of course we all hope that the alumni will create some single splendid memorial to the memory of all Harvard dead...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Communications | 5/28/1919 | See Source »

...news that Harry Hawker and his navigator Grieve, the daring pair who tried to be the first to cross the Atlantic by airplane, are safe again on English soil and were royally feted on their arrival last night in London cannot fail to appeal to the American imagination as much as to the British. A man who, unlike our more cautious United States Navy filers, "took all the chances" in a daredevil attempt to do what many air-men considered next to impossible, impressed American and British sportsmanship to the same high degree. From the moment of Hawker's sensational...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: HAWKER'S GREATER SERVICE. | 5/28/1919 | See Source »

...misgivings. Knowing as it does the competition which a Harvard daily must meet at the hands of the Boston papers, the limitations necessarily imposed by the Faculty, and the financial difficulties which even an established paper must face, the CRIMSON feels that a "six-column" paper would need as much support from the banks of Boston as the Magazine now receives from a certain type of "instructor." The CRIMSON has been developed by such editors as George S. Mandell, Franklin D. Roosevelt, Owen Wister, Barrett Wendell, Thomas W. Lamont, W. Roscoe Thayer, Robert Bacon, and countless others. It is difficult...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: "THE HARVARD DAILY." | 5/27/1919 | See Source »

That new heart has been put into the baseball team was shown conclusively by the Amherst game in which the nine worked like a machine. That track is much stronger than it was last week is shown by the return of several stars who were off the field in the Yale meet. The schedule has been so arranged that the baseball game should be finished by the time the track meet begins, thus affording a double entertainment to spectators. The added feature of a band and parade before the game should draw anyone to Soldier's Field who otherwise might...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: REVIVING OLD TIMES. | 5/24/1919 | See Source »

...such a rapid and mature educational growth as Beaune University can be produced and made to function by a group of Americans in a foreign country, 3,000 miles away, as it were, from their base, surely those interested in or connected with American universities are given food for much valuable thought Perhaps the same interest, the same initiative and creative energy which called Beaune University so miraculously into being, could perform equally great deeds, if employed in connection with many of the older educational institutions at home. At least the creation of Beaune, involving as it must have done...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE LESSON OF BEAUNE UNIVERSITY. | 5/23/1919 | See Source »

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