Word: woodwarding
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...Lect. Hall Comp. Philology 1b Emerson D French 13 hf. Emerson D Spanish 1 Emerson D Social Ethics 28 Emerson D Tomorrow 9.15 o'clock Anthropology 1 Pierce 110 Chemistry 15 Sever 29 Chemistry 17 Sever 29 Class. Philology 34 Sever 30 Economics 5 Abend--Averbuck Harvard 2 Bailey-Woodward Harvard 6 Economics 10b Harvard 3 Economics 41 Harvard 3 English 1 Adams-Coombs Sever 5 Cravier-Herstrom Sever 6 Higgins-Moss Sever 8 Newton-Zell Sever 11 Fine Arts 1f Robinson Hall Fine Arts 2c Sever 37 Fine Arts 2d Fogg Mus. Fine Arts 13a Fogg Lect. Rm. French...
...April 18) : "Just as the original 13 American United States grew so mutually jealous that in 1790 it was necessary to set aside the District of Columbia." If you don't know better the causes of the setting aside of the District of Columbia, let Mr. W. E. Woodward, whom you so much admire (TIME, April 25) tell you: "Eighty soldiers mutinied at Lancaster, Pa., in June, 1783. They marched on Philadelphia and appeared in front of the State House where Congress was in session. Congress called on the Executive Council of Pennsylvania, meeting in the same building...
...York City last week General Passenger Agent P. H. Woodward of the Long Island R. R. greeted Henry W. Gaines of Huntingtpn, L. I. Mr. Gaines, aged 70, had just achieved a half-century of daily commuting over the L. I. R. R. between Huntington and Manhattan (73 miles round trip). Passenger Agent Woodward declared that, assuming Commuter Gaines to have taken the train between his home and office twice daily, except Sundays, since 1877, he had ridden the equivalent of 45 times around the world on the L. I. R. R. For this the railroad gave Commuter Gaines...
...class squad tournament the Juniors won the championship. The team is composed of: G. T. Francis, Erlund Field, Talmadge Woodward, W. G. Saltonstall, R. H. Sanger, W. R. Huntington, H. N. Higinbotham. Their ranking was: Won Lost Juniors 5 1 Seniors 4 2 Sophomores 3 3 Freshman...
...most striking feature of Mrs. Woodward's story is by all odds her manner of depicting people. In the first place she observed them carefully. In the second, perhaps because she herself came from the environment of poverty, she tried to see them in their respective environments. In the third place, she narrates copious anecdotes with an evident zest. From the tyrannical Mrs. Johnson who played the lady of better days with tempestuous zeal before her awestricken secretary to the down-hearted young man who found his salvation in the little known occupation, of goldfish expert, many odd and enticing...