Word: sevens
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...Choate was born in Salem, Mass., on January 24, 1832. His father, a prominent physician of Salem and a graduate of the University in the Class of 1818, represented Salem in the General Court for seven years. Following in the footsteps of his father, Mr. Choate entered Harvard College, after receiving his preliminary education in the Salem public schools, and graduated in 1852. Two years later he received his degree from the Law School. He was the youngest of Dr. Choate's four sons, and married Caroline Dutcher Sterling...
...senior class at Exeter have chosen to complete their education at the University. Fifty will attend college here. Yale is second with a total of 18; Massachusetts Institute of Technology is the third choice with 13 students, closely followed by Dartmouth with 12. Princeton and Cornell are tied with seven each. Williams was chosen...
...States enter college. Then if he intends to take up some profession, he enters the superior grade. This corresponds to your professional schools. Just as our pupils must work harder in college, so your pupils work much harder in the professional schools. The course in our medical school takes seven years; in our law school, five. All one has to do is to attend classes in the morning...
...Newbury St., from 10 to 12 o'clock in the morning and from 2 to 5 o'clock in the afternoon. The term of enlistment is for the duration of the war. Already 120 applications have been received and 95 of these are from members of the University. Eighty-seven men will be selected from the total number of applicants and together with four officers will make up the personnel of the company. The commissioned officers must be approved by the Director General of the Department of Military Relief and will then be commissioned in the Red Cross and recommended...
...year the fertility of this nation is taxed at the rate of six billions pounds of foodstuffs which go into the production of forms of alcohol which have no social nor economic value. That is enough, as our economists have shown, at a low estimate to provide sustenance for seven million men for a year. Such figures might be compiled indefinitely. They may be gained from any governmental report...