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

...united effort of the squad through a season of continuous obstacles, the seven has been persistently developed, and it has come through undefeated. Among its other vanquished opponents are such teams as the Camp Devens Officers seven, St. Paul's, Boston College and Yale. While of course this record in no way wins for Harvard the championship of the East, nevertheless it does give her that title over Yale and Princeton. The University acknowledges its debt to the members of the hockey team for establishing such a precedent in the first major sport to get under way after...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: A PRECEDENT ESTABLISHED. | 2/24/1919 | See Source »

...Russian Alliance and his firm belief in the necessity of an entente with England. His untiring support of Dreyfus, in the long years when that famous case was disrupting all France, brought him many personal enemies among the military class. But in spite of all hostility to his past record, the French nation recognized him as its most implacable foe to Germany, its greatest patriot, and, in the dreary days of the winter of 1917-18, the man to raise the French morale...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: BROTHERS IN ARMS. | 2/24/1919 | See Source »

Approximately 36 per cent of the alumni and undergraduates of the University have been engaged actively in war work, while the service record of all college men in this country puts the number of those who took part in the war at only about 18 per cent, just half the University's record. Further statistics have been complied by the CRIMSON, which show that the men from Harvard, Yale, and Princeton served the nation equally well during the emergency, no one institution distinguishing itself above the others for its measure of sacrifice. It is evident that...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: TOTAL UNIVERSITY MEN IN WAR 36 PER CENT | 2/18/1919 | See Source »

Every undergraduate in the University at the time the United States entered the war, who was an "H" man in a major sport, or had won his letter on a minor team, was in the service at the time the armistice was signed. Statistics--showing the remarkable record of the University's athletes were given out at the H. A. A. Office yesterday. In addition it was shown that every man who was a member of the 1920 Freshman football or hockey teams was also in the Army or Navy...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: "H" MEN ALL IN SERVICE | 2/14/1919 | See Source »

Such is the spirit of the times. And it indicates that the University first to place itself upon a war basis is determined to get back to a peace footing in record time. The rate at which the change is being made will soon have divested the Colege of the last lingering signs of the days of military regime. They were days which, had their advantages and their disadvantages, but undoubtedly very few would elect to live them over again. Let the "peace paint" be applied ever so rapidly, the grim effects of war cannot be effaced too soon from...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE SPIRIT OF THE TIMES. | 2/14/1919 | See Source »

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