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

...will hold races to decide which shall be the regular class crew. The winners will enter the class races the following week together with a Law School crew. Owing to the proportionately small number of men rowing from the Law School, all of the candidates for this eight will train at one boat club so that, unlike the class crews, there will be but one crew picked...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: CLASS CREWS BEGIN WORK. | 2/12/1901 | See Source »

...give some of its students a good time or to swell a political triumph. It is most important for a University to foster patriotism; but it will do this best by insisting that patriotism is to be identified with the good citizenship for which it is aiming to train its students, rather than with demonstration of the torch-light order. There may be left to others who have nothing better to do. The idea that victory over Yale would result from having a larger number of students present or in walking through the streets of Washington first, is a curious...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE INAUGURAL PARADE. | 1/21/1901 | See Source »

...Tuskegee Institute is to train the young Southern Negroes as intelligent and capable farmers and artisans, and to teach them to regain the industrial supremacy which in their ignorance they lost after the war. It is in this effort to raise the industrial status, and with it the mental and moral conditions of the negro race, that the Institute appeals for the co-operation and aid of those who regard the interests of the black people and the interests of the whole country, which for good or evil, must be indissolubly intertwined with them...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Mr. Washington's Address | 12/18/1900 | See Source »

...debate will take place in the Academy Chapel at 8 o'clock. The train for Exeter will leave the North Union station at 4.15 o'clock. It is hoped that all Freshmen who can will go up to Exeter for the debate...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Freshman-Exeter Debate Tonight | 12/8/1900 | See Source »

...excursions in charge of Dr. Gregory. The morning was spent in examining West Rock, where the party found splendid exposures of the intrusive contact of a huge lava sheet with the Triasaic sand-stones. In the afternoon the party, including Professors Williams, Beecher and Pearson of Yale, took the train to Meriden, passing the escarpment of the hanging hills on the way, and going on to the large quarries in the lava beds north of the city. From there the party went along the great fault line where the displacement measures about 2,000 feet and to the so called...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Geological Excursion to Yale. | 11/19/1900 | See Source »

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