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

...annual handicap indoor meet of the Cambridgeport Gymnasium Association last evening members of the University track squad won a first, a second and a third place. J. P. Long '11 won the high jump with a handicap of 6 inches and an actual jump of 5 feet 6 inches; and J. L. Barr '10 was third with a handicap of 6 1-2 inches and an actual jump of 5 feet 4 1-2 inches. In the 20-yard dash J. P. Long '11, starting from the 4-foot mark, was barely beaten out for first place in the final...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Harvard Men Win Places in Cambridgeport Gymnasium Meet | 2/2/1909 | See Source »

...report on the clinical record of football injuries received by members of the University squad during the past four years, which is published this morning, is the first actual proof of any consequence we have had that the change in the football rules has led to a diminution in the number and extent of injuries. The spectator soon realized that he found more entertainment in witnessing a good exhibition of the open game with wide runs, passes and frequent kicks than in watching four hundred and fifty pounds or more of concentrated power forcing their way through one small hole...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: FOOTBALL INJURY STATISTICS. | 1/15/1909 | See Source »

...Fogg Art Museum last evening. Many of the recollections had to do with events and experiences connected with the speaker's own class: its fondness for athletics, its devotion to the old-time system of prescribed studies, its literary efforts and finally its misdemeanors, culminating in an actual rebellion against the Faculty. This same disorderly and rebellious class has furnished five members of the Board of Overseers...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE OLD-TIME HARVARD LIFE | 1/15/1909 | See Source »

...particular significance. No man in the Faculty of recent years has been more actively interested and has arrived at a fuller appreciation of certain problems of the student body. He has believed in going straight to the heart of things, of determining from the student himself what the actual situation is and planning a solution accordingly. It is to be expected he will pursue this policy. His especial interest during the past year, that of effecting the best method of rewarding high scholarship, in which he has done much constructive work, is only one of many such problems in solving...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: A NEW PRESIDENT CHOSEN. | 1/14/1909 | See Source »

...Brien saw much of the actual use of jiu-jitsu, as inspector of police at Nagasaki, Japan, for more than eight years. His ideas, however, are not exclusively Japanese, but merely an adaptation from them, developed into a practical, efficient system. He has given many exhibitions of his methods, with the aid of his Japanese assistants, both in this country and elsewhere. Several years ago, he gave an exhibition in Cambridge...

Author: By J. J. Obrien, FORMER JAPANESE POLICE INSPECTOR, IN UNION AT 8. | Title: EXPOSITION OF JIU-JITSU | 12/21/1908 | See Source »

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