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Word: subject (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1900-1909
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Usage:

...George von L. Meyer '79, postmaster general of the United States, will speak in the Living Room of the Union next Monday evening, at 8 o'clock. His subject will be "The Post Office and Proposed Changes Therein"; he will discuss postal savings banks and parcel post on rural routes...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Postmaster General in Union Monday | 10/31/1908 | See Source »

...Lincoln Steffens, author of "The Shame of the Cities," and "The Struggle for Self Government," will speak in the Living Room of the Union this evening at 8 o'clock, on the subject of "Politics, the Game." His lecture will show how the rules of "the game" are changing...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: UNION LECTURE ON POLITICS | 10/27/1908 | See Source »

...Neitzel, of Strassburg, Germany, will deliver the first of a series of 15 lectures on "The Principles of German Civil Law" this afternoon at 2 o'clock. These lectures will be given in the North Lecture Room of Austin Hall on Monday and Tuesday afternoons. Today's discourse, the subject of which is "Federal and States' Powers under the German Constitution," will be open to the public...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Judge Neitzel's First Lecture Today | 10/26/1908 | See Source »

...Lincoln Steffens, author of "The Shame of the Cities," will speak in the Living Room of the Union tomorrow, at 8 o'clock, on the subject of "Politics; the Game." His lecture will show how the rules of "The game" are changing...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Political Speech in Union Tomorrow | 10/26/1908 | See Source »

...which so few of the thousands of his hearers had any true conception before they listened to his talk, was the keynote of most that he had to say to them. The course professed to be about Greek art, and certainly nobody was better qualified to illuminate that subject; but it was wonderful to observe how he showed that such a seemingly dead and gone thing could be a living influence, in so many different ways, upon this work-a-day world. It may seem a prodigious leap from Apelles to chromos, from the Greek tunic to ready-made clothes...

Author: By M. H. Morgan., | Title: PROF. NORTON'S FUNERAL | 10/23/1908 | See Source »

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