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

...National Board of Education, it bas been found that one out of every forty college graduates now living has attained recognized distinction of some sort in the country; and that one in every ten thousand, who have not received the benefit of higher education, has attained similar success. The classification of 15,138 conspicuous Americans whose names appear in Appleton's Encyclopaedia of American Biography shows the following result: College Graduates. From Academies. Non College Percentage of College Men. Scientists, 341 25 164 64.30 Educators, 625 42 345 61.76 Clergymen, 1505 59 1080 56.92 Lawyers, 841 68 769 50.12 Physicians...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Statistics in Regard to College Education. | 1/15/1901 | See Source »

...Boston, preached in Appleton Chapel last night, taking as his text the thirty seventh verse of the eighth chapter of Romans: In all these things we are more than conquerers.." To overcome temptations, to surmount obstacles, to be the conqueror in life's battle is seemingly to attain supreme success. And there is a strange sound in the word of Paul, be ye "more than conquerors." And yet in the history of the world's great battles he learns that there is, after all, something beyond conquest. A great military here is messured not merely by the completeness...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Chapel Services Yesterday | 1/14/1901 | See Source »

Well beloved son of the College, he was in this generation the fulfillment of Harvard's ideal; "and the grief of a whole state is the witness of his success...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Death of Ex-Governor Wolcott | 12/22/1900 | See Source »

...Mandolin Club is at present the most advanced of the three, and is fully up to its standard of last year. It has a large portion of old members, and is playing rather more difficult music than usual, with good success. The club is made up as follows...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Musical Clubs. | 12/18/1900 | See Source »

...begin to question the wisdom or rightness of their life because the abolitionists attacked them from without. The leading men of the lower South displayed a constantly heightened pride and a more and more stubborn unwillingness to concede anything whatever to the outside opponents of their system. But no success attended the efforts of the Southerners, in the fifties, to improve and extend their industrial system without changing it. The actual process by which slavery was in the end overthrown was in fact quite foreign to the purposes of the avowed abolitionists. They contributed to the result only by exciting...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Lecture on the Lower South. | 12/15/1900 | See Source »

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