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Word: students (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1929
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Usage:

With Commencement only a month a head, business firms have been applying to the Student Employment office in University Hall for students to fill permanent positions. The openings afforded are in firms ranging from insurance and banking corporations to fruit and sugar producers in the tropics...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: BUSINESS FIRMS SEEK TO OBTAIN GRADUATES | 5/22/1928 | See Source »

Miss Ling Nyi Vee, Chinese student of Wesleyan College at Macon, Ga.. made a non-stop flight from Macon to Shanghai in 24 hours. Alone above the Pacific Ocean she had only crackers and pickles with which to fight hunger. She was forced to fly so high that her radio messages were frozen. When she reached Shanghai she was given a tremendous and well-deserved reception...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: AERONAUTICS: Scoop | 5/21/1928 | See Source »

Only one U. S. newspaper carried the story last week. This so incensed the editor of the Richmond Christian Advocate* that he published an editorial flaying the U. S. press for not recognizing the epic achievement of a Chinese student of a Methodist institution of learning. Said the editorial: "We are glad a Chinese girl won the honor. Had some society woman, sponsored by some rich party, done this deed, volumes of front pages would have come...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: AERONAUTICS: Scoop | 5/21/1928 | See Source »

...reading the comic strips and the average humorous magazine, it might have good reason to believe that our universities are places where half-baked young men in alcoholic stupors congregate to indulge in petty vices. But fortunately, most sane individuals are capable of discounting such pictures of the college student, and see in these caricatures nothing more than a grotesque and rather obvious attempt at humor. This is, however, a more sinister type of publicity concerning the undergraduate which is designed to catch the eyes of scandal-loving readers by distorting any item of college news which might be made...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE PRESS | 5/21/1928 | See Source »

...demand for greater speed. But if the brick speedway was a risky school of improvement, the air is at least equally dangerous. The Harvard Flying Club has made its original fulfillment of its two most important by-laws richer by repetition; "purchasing an aeroplane... for the instruction of student pilots", it has "created and maintained an interest in aeronautics at Harvard". The financial side of the Club, particularly dark at the time of founding in March, 1925, has been put on a sound basis. If the Club's development were restricted to this kind of inner strengthening rather than...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE FLYING CLUB RACES | 5/19/1928 | See Source »

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