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

...today, and the dormitories will be canvassed "during the hours of 2-3 and 7-8 o'clock. The clothes are distributed among the poor of Boston and vicinity. Men living in private houses can get the committee's collection wagon to call later in the week by sending work to S. B. Snow, Matthews 18. In view of the fact that many laundry bundles were stolen from the dormitories last week, it is advisable that men expecting to be away at these hours should previously deliver clothing to the porter and not leave it outside their doors...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: December Clothing Collection | 12/6/1899 | See Source »

...stage, although large parts have been taken bodily from it by more popular authors, especially Moliere. The original play contained five acts, but in order to bring it into suitable compass for amateur theatricals it has been found necessary to cut it down to three acts. This work was done by M. C. H. Bernard and H. B. Stanton...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Cercle Play. | 12/5/1899 | See Source »

...been nominally in charge of the regular Class Day Committee. Perhaps, in a sense, it is connected with Class Day; but it is not a Class Day affair, and does not come on Class Day. Further, and much more important, the management of Class Day proper is ample work for any committee of three. Indeed, this fact has been so well recognized hitherto, that the Class Day Committees have promptly delegated the actual management of the promenade to a subordinate committee...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Communication. | 12/5/1899 | See Source »

...Dixwell left the Latin School and established a private school on Boylston place, where he taught for twenty years. Senator Lodge and Governor Wolcott were among his pupils. He gave up his work as a teacher in 1871, and retired to his home in Cambridge, where he had been living up to the time of his death. Mr. Dixwell was one of Harvard's oldest graduates...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: OBITUARY. | 12/4/1899 | See Source »

...Harvard exists no more today than it has in previous years. Professor Byerly dismisses as a test the admission of Radcliffe students in the Graduate School. He admits the second point raised by Professor Wendell: the professors lecture at Radcliffe for salaries when they might be doing research work, but says: "If Professor Wendell has discovered a method by which his colleagues can publish the results of their original research with pecuniary profit to themselves, he has only to make it known to become Harvard's greatest benefactor." The third objection to the present relations between the institutions, that...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE GRADUATES' MAGAZINE. | 12/4/1899 | See Source »

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