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

About 1000 cars may also be parked in Soldiers Field, entering by gates from Soldiers Field Road, and parking space is also provided on private fields on Western avenue, between Everett street and North Howard street. For these a small parking fee is charged...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: ANNOUNCE RULES FOR TRAFFIC | 11/21/1919 | See Source »

Nobody knows what an "adequate" army is. How small an army we can maintain depends on how small an army we can induce each other nation to maintain. We can hardly achieve that end by this disingenuous grab at the principle of conscription, together with much talk of an altogether hypothetical "necessity...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: A Disingenuous Grab. | 11/15/1919 | See Source »

Today is the last day of the Red Cross Drive, and with the University far behind its quota, the committee urges all teams to make a determined effort to secure as many members as possible. The total number of men who have enrolled is small, and of these very few have given more than, the actual sum necessary for enrollment...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: RED CROSS DRIVE OVER TODAY | 11/14/1919 | See Source »

...Corporation to be his successor Mr. Lane has been actively connected with the work since 1908, when he was appointed Publication Agent of the University to succeed the late John B. Williams '77, upon the death of the latter. At that time the printing was done in a small room in University Hall, but was expanded in 1913, and became the University Press, with Mr. Lane as its first director. Three and a half years later the Press was moved into more extensive quarters in Randall Hall, on the corner of Divinity avenue and Kirkland street. Here, under Mr. Lane...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: C. C. LANE '04 RESIGNS AS DIRECTOR OF HARVARD PRESS | 11/12/1919 | See Source »

Entrance examinations are largely to blame for the small capacity for self-education shown by college men. The entrance requirements are not too hard, but they are too numerous. In preparing for either the new or old plan tests, the average boy needs to put in a working day of six to eight hours of prescribed work during his last four years at school. He has not time to develop properly any independent intellectual interests worth cultivating; he has little leisure for self-improvement and self-development, and even this leisure he is apt to find has been planned...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE ROOT OF THE PROBLEM. | 11/12/1919 | See Source »

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