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

...next week offer fortunate opportunity for a new social service. There will be a number of prospective members of the college in Cambridge taking the examinations for entrance, some of them men from the preparatory schools nearby and others from distant sections of the country. To both groups the stay in Cambridge will be a very significant event; and it will be well to make their visit a pleasant one. Men who know sub-freshmen should "show them the ropes" to some extent and not assume the ridiculously childish air of undergraduate psuedo-dignity which prejudices the stranger...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: HOSPITALITY TO VISITORS. | 6/15/1912 | See Source »

...Princeton crew squads will arrive in Cambridge today to participate in Thursday's triangular race. Cornell's squad will reach the Huntington Avenue Station at 9.10 o'clock this morning; the Princeton squad will arrive at Back Bay Station this evening at 9.30 o'clock. Both crews will stay at the Hotel Victoria, and will row from the Weld boathouse, which has been set aside for their use. One of the University's steam launches has been placed at the disposal of each of the visiting crews...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: CREW SQUADS ARRIVE TODAY | 5/21/1912 | See Source »

...that the men who contributed this $1200 should have the best possible equipment under the circumstances. We ventured to point out that this was far from the case, that a certain sum of money, contributed by the large number of men who indulge in tennis, was not used to stay, the crying need of the courts. Unfortunately, the true situation was not called to our attention until too late last spring for us to advocate improvements before the end of the year...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE TENNIS COURTS. | 2/21/1912 | See Source »

...when he still had the chance? His very success in his technical field rankles in his heart, for he sees the highest rung of the ladder on which he has started not far beyond his reach. A few advances will put him at the top, and there he must stay, unable to step over to another ladder whose height towers far above his own. His college-bred contemporaries may have climbed their ladders more slowly at the beginning, but for them there is the possibility of further progress, while he has reached the limit of his restricted field...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: LIBERAL VS. TECHNICAL EDUCATION. | 1/6/1912 | See Source »

Athletic intercourse has come to stay, but as athletics are not all of any college life, it is evident that Harvard should meet other colleges in other fields. To be sure, we already have a chance to come into intellectual contact through intercollegiate debates, but this contact is far too insignificant in proportion to the importance of our intellectual interests. It is an encouraging step in the right direction, therefore, when we see such a thing as the intercollegiate architectural competition, which has now been established through the generosity of Mr. Lloyd Warren of New York. This spring Harvard...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: ARCHITECTURAL COMPETITION. | 1/5/1912 | See Source »

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