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

These statistics are by no means complete, especially for the auxiliary service, but they show that of the 4,919 members of the club, almost one in five is in active service, and one in four is in some sort of war service...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: 914 ON N. Y. CLUB'S WAR LIST | 1/30/1918 | See Source »

...call for college graduates. To meet this call, and to meet it with men specially trained in a specific phase of modern business, the older institutions of learning must eliminate what seems needless. So Cambridge has broken a time-honored standard to accommodate the needs of today. Nothing could show more strikingly the present demand for men of practical liberal education, and the duty of universities to develop them...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: SMALL LATIN AND LESS GREEK | 1/28/1918 | See Source »

Daily wood-cutting for members of the University who have volunteered for this work during the mid year period will begin today continue until February 9. Ten men will journey to Waltham every day except Sunday to engage in the work. Figures issued from the University Employment Bureau show that the men who chorped wood during the Christmas recess earned a total of $635 during their ten days of service...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Wood-Choppers Commence Work | 1/26/1918 | See Source »

This whole haphazard business must stop now. A few more such occurrences will show us unworthy of the Government's patronage, for we do not want to have the R. O. T. C. merely a motley array of undergraduates in uniform. It is recognized as a military organization and that it must remain. Discipline among friends is a difficult proposition; there is a constant temptation to visit the top-sergeant tell him a sad story about how much work you had, and then remind him of what good friends you two have always been. This is the easiest...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: DISHONORABLE DISCHARGE | 1/24/1918 | See Source »

Statistics given out by the Medical School show that 1,118 children were examined at the commission's clinics during the year ending November 20, 1917. Of these 402 had infantile paralysis prior to 1916; 670 during 1916, and 46 during 1917. The cases which are being followed up at the homes by the orthopedic nurses number 645; by the state field workers of the commission, 520 and by the Boston Instructive District Nursing Association for the commission...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Medical Board Appeals for Funds | 1/24/1918 | See Source »

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