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

...Freshman baseball team will play the Brown freshmen this afternoon at 4 o'clock on Soldiers Field. This will be the last game for the Freshmen before they meet Yale 1912 at New Haven, on Tuesday...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: FRESHMEN VS. BROWN 1912 | 5/22/1909 | See Source »

...schedule at Princeton. No game has been won from the Princeton team on its home grounds for twelve years, and it is well known that precedent plays an important part in deciding athletic contests. But last Saturday what was becoming a precedent was broken at Cambridge, and a new one established which will serve to encourage the University team today. Although defeat was met at Brown in the middle of the week, we still have every confidence in the Harvard nine's ability to play good baseball. Not an error was made in the first game with Princeton, and although...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: PRINCETON AGAIN | 5/22/1909 | See Source »

...devotion of Professor Kuehnemann to whatever he had undertaken in the University and expressed the wish that at his departure we could again say as we said two years ago: "Auf wiedersehen." Professor Muensterberg next spoke of the change that had occurred in German literature and of the new spirit that had arisen. In the period of the greatness of German literature and art, the country was cosmopolitan because national strength was lacking. This disappeared under the influence of the political unity effected in the middle of the last century. There is now a sentiment of international patriotism, under which...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: PROF. KUEHNEMANN HONORED | 5/22/1909 | See Source »

Professor Kuehnemann began by expressing his pleasure at being able to see a new epoch open in the history of Harvard, and at carrying away a pleasant impression of President Lowell. He then took up the question of cosmopolitanism and explained that the present conception is not that of the Stoics or of the Epicureans. It is a sentiment that has grown with the idea of nationalism and has absorbed it. A feeling of sympathy for the nations has arisen, and with it a desire to impart to them whatever it possesses of the best. All academic life alike, seeks...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: PROF. KUEHNEMANN HONORED | 5/22/1909 | See Source »

...curator of the Peabody Museum. In 1886 he received the appointment to the Peabody professorship. He has also held the positions of chief of the department of ethnology at the World's Columbian Exposition and the curatorship of the division of Anthropology in the American Museum of Natural History, New York. His publications on zoology and anthropology number over 300. Since 1870 he has been engaged in research work and explorations in American archeology...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Resignation of Prof. F. W. Putnam | 5/22/1909 | See Source »

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