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

...those in charge of the chorus to make it similar to those existing among the students in German universities. The organization has the support of the Faculty and its is proposed to have it sing on Commencement and Class Days and also to give concerts in the Union throughout the winter months. The aim of the organizers of the chorus is to interest a large number of men who are fond of singing rather than to limit the membership to a very few whose vocal qualifications are exceptional...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Men Needed for University Chorus | 1/28/1911 | See Source »

...game was closely contested throughout the first period, Sortwell and Hopkins scoring for the Freshmen toward the close. Two more goals were scored by 1914 in the second period, and just thirty seconds before the end of the game Phillips made the only score for Milton. The line-ups: 1914. MILTON ACADEMY. Hopkins, l.e. r.e., Handy Sortwell, l.c. r.c., Phillips Adams, Stevenson, r.c. l.c., Felton Woods, r.e. l.e., Allis Williams, Devereux, Wingate, c.p. c.p., Talbot Willetts, p. p., Clark Carnochan, g. g., Wigglesworth...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: FRESHMEN DEFEATED MILTON | 1/26/1911 | See Source »

...defeating Yale in the St. Nicholas Rink on Saturday evening by the score of 4 to 2, Cornell is now the only team in the Intercollegiate Hockey League, besides Harvard, which has not been beaten. The game on Saturday was clean and well played throughout...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Cornell Hockey Team Undefeated | 1/23/1911 | See Source »

From comparative statistics of the Philadelphia Bulletin, it appears that whereas at Harvard the ratio of instructors to students is as one to seven, in the average of colleges throughout the country, it is as one to ten. Such as showing would suggest that personal contact between Faculty and student body is freer and more instructive here than elsewhere. Yet so many are the courses given in abstruse and advanced subjects, where the professor collects a small circle of pupils for research work and the like, that in the large introductory courses this is by no means the case...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: LARGE COURSES AND EDUCATION. | 1/20/1911 | See Source »

...ordinary degree. It was established in the hope of arousing an effective desire for high-standard scholarship, and to fill the place of the "honors" in English universities, where the importance attached to distinguished intellectual attainment is very great. There high honors are always remembered and constantly referred to throughout a man's life. Referring to this, President Lowell said: "It is that spirit which must be cultivated here if we would foster a desire for scholarship in College. So long as the distinctions achieved in College are not worthy of perpetuation, or are not deemed...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE DEGREE WITH DISTINCTION. | 1/17/1911 | See Source »

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