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

...number of his classmates. At the close of the war he went to the University of Glasgow where he studied marine engineering. Returning later to Harvard he received the degree of S. B. A few months ago he left for California to take a position with a water-wheel company...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Obituary. | 3/8/1905 | See Source »

Officers of the Lampoon for the ensuing year have been elected as follows: president, D. C. Bartholomew '06; treasurer, H. W. Nichols '07; secretary, C. D. Davol '06. A. G. Gill '06 and R. Wheel-wright '06 have been elected regular editors...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Lampoon Elections. | 1/18/1905 | See Source »

Howe, T.D., wheel manufacturing...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Senior Class Occupations. | 6/24/1904 | See Source »

...literary conscience is especially inflamed against "crass stupidity in journalistic criticism." E. Bernbaum and W. A. Green grow positively heated over the ineptitudes of Boston, and other, critics of Ibsen and Shaw, and crush with grimness the wretched Grub Street on their wheel. Nay, more: they--especially Mr. Green--illustrate what journalistic criticism should be.--easily colloquial, anecdotal, popular, yet sound. Of course, the critics could rejoin that such writing means time and work: does the public want it badly enough to pay for it? Mr. Bernbaum, by the way, is depressed over the American public, is past even regretting...

Author: By J. B. Fletcher., | Title: The Harvard Monthly for April. | 4/4/1904 | See Source »

...recently asked for from undergraduates about ways of improving courses might be given next time not by A and B men, but by their "alphabetically interior brothren." The second editorial espigates the Freshman, already sore with promiscuous good advice, and warns him not to make his life "a giddy wheel of irresponsibility with its centre in the Hub." It may be a personal prejudice but fancy seems to me more delightful when it plays about actual facts than when it cuts loose from them and becomes purely fantastic. In the former case there seems to be a more genuine pleasure...

Author: By G. Sanvayana, | Title: Professor Santayana on the Lampoon. | 11/9/1903 | See Source »

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