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

...their class committee, and managed to get third place, the Juniors falling to last. The Freshman class is still well in the lead with a total of $2147, although only 25 per cent of the class have contributed. If the rest of the members keep up this average, 1916 ought to be able to stay in the lead. As only 2 per cent of the Senior class have made contributions since the last report, their total was not increased very much. The Standing of the Classes. Amounts Percentage of Class Contributed Contributing...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: YESTERDAY'S CONTRIBUTIONS | 3/25/1913 | See Source »

...graduate. Its illustrations are mostly unflattering snap-shots of the ugliest Harvard buildings. Altogether, the Illustrated suffers from over-specialization in photographs and expository articles. Its editors need illustrators, story-writers, verse-makers, whose work may set off articles like those of Dr. Williams and Mr. Parsons; and they ought to realize that pictures of Compressibility Machines, Seismographs, and Boylston Hall cannot liven any magazine which aims to be more spirited than an encyclopaedia...

Author: By Frederick L. Allen., | Title: GYMNASIUM NUMBER REVIEW | 3/18/1913 | See Source »

...Faculty outside of the classroom, and consequently often have a very inadequate notion of their personalities, and their abilities to be interesting apart from their regular work. And in the second place, the topic and the special work which Professor Perry has done in connection with Lincoln's life ought to bring out a good audience. Lincoln is one of those men whose lives loom larger as the perspective forms about them. And in such an essentially American University there should be enough men desirous of knowing Lincoln better to crowd the Living Room to the doors...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE LECTURE BY PROF. PERRY. | 2/18/1913 | See Source »

...stories. "They don't end as they ought to, or, perhaps better, as do those I am accustomed to read," says the Victorian. "Yours is very definite, very cleverly told, Mr. Burlingame, but why deal with the exceptional Boston John, especially if he is a snob and a cad, when there are so many Johns of Boston who are straight and clean and brave? The gentleman of the first person, as well as he of the third, whom Mr. Barlow conducts through a Parisian evening in a study of the contrast between Basque impetuosity and English simplicity, pay a very...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: HARVARD MONTHLY REVIEW | 2/3/1913 | See Source »

...Shenk and Phillips, who distinguished themselves last year; E. Trenkman, Ballin, W. Swart, Longstreth, and I. Swart, who will be the logical candidate for centre. Princeton also has a number of men of varsity, Calibre who were ineligible last year, namely Hammond, Boland, Larson and Pope. These men ought to show up well next year. From the freshman team particularly good material will be available for the ends. Brown and Lamberton are players capable of filling Dunlap's and Wight's places. Glick, the freshman quarterback; Semmens and Love, tackles; Heyniger, guard; and Shea, a halfback, are also promising...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: FOOTBALL PROSPECTS FOR 1913 | 1/18/1913 | See Source »

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