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Word: whose (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1890-1899
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Usage:

Graduate Club to Assist.A large number of new-comers each year are men who have come to Harvard for advanced study and whose needs at the beginning of the year are in many respects different from those of men just entering college. To such and to any others who may come to them, a committee of the Graduate Club will be prepared to give assistance on Thursday, Sept. 26, from 9 to 1, in 24 University Hall. The Committee will be composed of representatives of the different departments of study in the Graduate School, and will be glad to give...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: RECEPTION OF STUDENTS. | 9/24/1895 | See Source »

...scope and the enlargement of the staff has made imperative a corresponding enlargement of the working space. Then, too, the CRIMSON office has become the headquarters for Harvard news of the leading Boston, New York and Philadelphia papers as well as of the principal news-getting associations, for whose correspondents desk-room is provided...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The New Crimson Office. | 9/23/1895 | See Source »

...Possibly this sounds commonplace and conventionally sermonic. But it is a commonplace which occasionally needs repetition, for one hears now and again from men whose whole lineage is full of Christian saints and whose character is saturated with the Christian prayers, hopes and theologies of their fathers, that Christ and His Church, having done their work, must now give way to the ascendancy of culture and reason and ethics. To repeat the words of James Russell Lowell, they are 'degenerate sons of heroic ancestors, who, having been trained in a society educated in schools, the foundations of which were laid...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: FROM HARVARD'S HISTORY. | 6/17/1895 | See Source »

...intricate social problems the citizen's chief concern is not the protection of his own interests, the strengthening of his own prejudices or the defence of his own class, but what on the whole will lead men to the truth. Of you as well as of those whose names are written in yonder Hall, Lowell speaks in his Commemoration...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: FROM HARVARD'S HISTORY. | 6/17/1895 | See Source »

...Mason off at first. Abbott and Warren got their bases on balls, but Bowen struck out. Harvard got one run in this inning. Highlands got his base on balls, went to second on Rand's hit, third on Hubbard's error and scored on Hayes's grounder to Soule, whose brilliant stop was the star play of the game...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: HARVARD, 11; NEWTON A. A., 2. | 6/17/1895 | See Source »

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