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Word: harvardians (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1940-1949
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Usage:

...success; but not so much of a success that any other aspiring musicians will be turned away when the group scrapes itself together again at seven o'clock next Thursday evening. At present they have been unable to find a regular meeting place safe from the unsympathetic ears of Harvardian philistines, but the plan is to meet at Lowell B-11 Thursday night anyway in the hopes that somebody will crash through. Prospective hot artists should not stay away because of fears of getting involved in a time consuming project. This is not an association of eager beavers...

Author: By Robert NORTON Ganz jr., | Title: Jazz | 10/9/1946 | See Source »

...also figured in Friday's triumph, landed in a triple tie for fifth place by shooting a score of 171. Mulcahy's 82-81, which nosed out Jack Harvey, of Boston College, by two strokes, was the highest score ever to win the event and made him the fourth Harvardian to wear the crown...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Mulcahy Wins in New England Golf Contest With 163 at Wachusett | 5/21/1946 | See Source »

...matter how much warned, practically every denizen of the Yard hovels has investigated Radcliffe before branching out to Wellesley, Smith, and finally to Vassar. Recent developments, however, have made it a doubtful proposition whether the heaven that has been Poughkeepsie will still be within range of the Harvardian. Even the 14 miles to Wellesley now looks like a long trip. Radcliffe, it is certain, will come to play a larger part in the life of Harvard as time goes...

Author: By L. ESPRIT Gauiols, | Title: Harvard Life Proves Not to Be All Work and No Play | 3/3/1944 | See Source »

...matter how much warned, practically every denizen of the Yard hovels has investigated Radcliffe before branching out of Wellesley, Smith, and finally to Vassar. Recent developments, however, have made it a doubtful proposition whether the heaven that has been Poughkeepsie will still be within range of the Harvardian. Even the 14 miles to Wellesley now looks like a long trip. Radcliffe, it is certain, will come to play a larger part in the life of Harvard as time goes...

Author: By L. ESORIT Gaulois, | Title: Social Life Vital Part of Students' Initiation Into "The Fellowship of Educated Men" | 7/1/1943 | See Source »

...requires a patience of ear and of intellect which many readers lack; patience not merely in one reading but in many. For a long time, too, it was easy to misjudge Eliot, thanks to certain of his admirers, as the mere precious laureate of a Harvardian coterie. But that time, fortunately, is well past. So levelheaded a man as Somerset Maugham has recently (in his Introduction to Modern English & American Literature-anthology; TIME, May 24) done both poetry and plain readers a notable service by introducing Eliot to a large audience, without talking down and without so much as mentioning...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: At the Still Point | 6/7/1943 | See Source »

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