Word: spent
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...highest endowments both physical and mental and his sudden death removes one of the most promising of the recent graduates of Harvard. He was universally admired and respected,- a man at once recognized as a natural leader by all with whom he came in contact. After graduation he spent two years at the Harvard Law School and has since been reading law in the office of Henrich, Allen and Boynon, in Chicago. He was a delegate from Harvard University to the University of Dublin at the celebration of the three hundredth anniversary of that institution...
...School man who has spent some years in Europe, desires to find five men to accompany him on a trip for the summer vacation. It is proposed to visit London, Paris, Holland, Belgium, the Rhine, Switzerland, Northern Italy, Austria and Germany, doing the more interesting portions on bicycles. For full particulars address, X, care of Leavitt and Peirce...
...make the class nines play on diamonds that pervert ordinary baseball conditions, and make it doubly hard to acquire confidence and skill. The lease which the University has on Norton's expires this year, and will not be renewed; it may, in consequence, be objected that any money spent on the field would do no good next year. But next year or no next year, there is this year, and a large sum of money could be spent this year on baseball without a cent's being thrown away. Good diamonds, and not simply apologies for diamonds, are needed...
...increased number of waiters behind the screens to distribute the food. The first of these plans has been tried at the general tables with good result, and the second would obviate a large amount of lost time. Indeed, it is quite plain that, at crowded hours, more time is spent by a waiter in obtaining food than in carrying it to his table...
...inexperienced speakers. There are very many men in the University who would be glad to practice debate, if only better facilities could be afforded, and there is good reason to hope that the effort to form debating clubs of students interested in particular branches of study would not be spent in vain. Sharp work, however, is needed...