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Word: seen (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1880-1889
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This amounts to $1493 59 and is divided among the seven hundred and seventy-one members in sums ranging from a few cents to something over fourteen dollars. The amounts have been computed and may be seen at the office of the society during its business hours...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Co-operative Society. | 11/23/1888 | See Source »

...Cambridge, gave a scholarly paper on the Arabian dialect of Cairo, embodying the results of a study made of the subject during a residence in Egypt last winter. A very instructive paper was presented by Professor Frothingham, of Princeton, on Mohammedan education, whose most perfect developement is seen in the eighth, ninth and tenth centuries of our era. This development was largely due to impulses from without. The range of study was comprehensive and instruction was free. Professor Hall, of New York, gave an account of a Syriac manuscript containing a new text of the Traditions of the Apostles, brief...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Harvard Professors Among the American Orientalists. | 11/22/1888 | See Source »

...seen from the following extract from yesterday's Globe, the Yale-Princeton game will probably take place in New York next Saturday...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Football Situation. | 11/21/1888 | See Source »

When our attention was called to this attack in the Wesleyan Argus, we treated it with the contempt it deserved by passing it by unnoticed, remembering the source from which it came. In a recent number of the Princetoniun, however, the editors have seen fit to publish the extracts from the editorials in question. If, as it seems, those statements of the Argus are to go the rounds of the college press, we have, in justice to the Harvard team, to notice them far enough to deny them. What movive actuated the editors of the Princetonian to reprint the statements...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 11/6/1888 | See Source »

...their prosperity, he has dug his way into a heap of the veriest rubbish and then blinded by the dust in his eyes, he has yielded to his distorted imagination and has called his work an accurate description of what he has found. Were every statement he has seen fit to make a complete truth-we deny this with all the energy we can sum-mon-nevertheless, the disquisition would still be one of the gravest of falsehoods: it would be a falsehood because it is meant to convey the impression abroad that the whole system of Harvard is wrong...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 11/3/1888 | See Source »

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