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

Tomorrow an address by Superintendent William C. Bates, of Fall River, on "The Will and the Power to Do and to Be," will be followed by the reports of the treasurer and committees...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Teachers' Association Meeting. | 11/27/1903 | See Source »

...William Jackson Clotheir '04, left end, prepared at Haverford, Pa., where he played three years on the football team and was also on the baseball and track teams. Before coming to Harvard he spent two years at Swarthmore, where he played end on the football team. Under the one year residence rule he was ineligible to play until last year. He is 6 feet 1 1-2 inches tall, weighs 174 pounds, and is 22 years...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Harvard Team Statistics. | 11/21/1903 | See Source »

Frederick William Lehmenn Jr., '05, right tackle, prepared at Smith Academy, St. Louis, where he played on the school team at right tackle. Last year he played on the University second eleven. He is 5 feet 11 inches tall, 19 years of age and weighs 189 pounds...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Harvard Team Statistics. | 11/21/1903 | See Source »

...that the new issue sins more grievously than its predecessors in this respect. Of the two pieces of criticism here published, that by S. Hale has no more than the usual amount of literary slang, and if most of what he has to say of William Watson's poetry is fairly obvious, it is at least clearly thought out. W. A. Green's "The Versatile Mr. Kipling," is less satisfactory. He is guilty of saying that "in 'Gentleman Rankers' there is a more serious turn of finality" than in "the whimsically pathetic protest of 'Tommy'." If the Monthly...

Author: By W. A. Neilson., | Title: The November Monthly. | 11/20/1903 | See Source »

Professor William James, on behalf of the Faculty, welcomed the Germanic Museum as an addition to our general back-ground of culture. He spoke of the spirit of study here.--minute research, mainly, as derived from Germany, and said that Harvard could recognize its own spirit of great individuality in these objects of plastic art. He compared the Germanic with the Classic spirit in art. Bacon expressed the Germanic spirit when he wrote "there is no excellent beauty without some strangeness in the proportion." The Mediterranean spirit has always sought to avoid strangeness, and there by its works...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: GERMANIC MUSEUM OPENING. | 11/11/1903 | See Source »

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