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Word: secretly (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
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Usage:

...lecture upon "The Jewels of the Madonna" and "The Secret of Suzanne," with musical illustrations and vocal solos, will be given by Mr. Hubbard of the Boston Opera Company, assisted by Mr. Baxter, of Boston, in the Living Room of the Union Friday evening at 7.30 o'clock...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: On the Schedule of Lectures | 3/5/1914 | See Source »

...first group is composed of the old ethical type of teachers, men of great intellectual distinction, but whose ways of teaching were more partisan than those of today. The most famous man, and real representative of this group, was Mark Hopkins, former president of Williams College. He had the secret of subtle power which the leading writers and great men of that day tried in vain to analyze. With his skill in handling individual men and his direct impressive methods of teaching he truly represented the old-fashioned dignity, simplicity, and reverence which pervaded the class room in the early...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: TEACHERS ARE LESS PARTISAN | 2/26/1914 | See Source »

Charles Edward Brickley '15, of Everett, was yesterday elected captain of the University football team for 1914 by the eighteen "H" men on this year's squad. The players met to make their choice in Captain Storer's room yesterday afternoon at 5 o'clock, taking, as usual, a secret ballot...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: BRICKLEY LEADS 1914 TEAM | 12/19/1913 | See Source »

...from Harvard's recognized primacy among educational institutions has come the rather general belief that Harvard is exclusive expensive attainable only to rich men and indulgent of vices common to the gilded youth. In truth, however Harvard with its non-sectarianism. Its enormous cosmopolitan attendance its prohibition of secret societies with their caste and clannishness, its diversified course of study in the college proper and the many special schools that make-up the University is the most democratic of educational institutions: and the fact that there are some 1,600 students in the academic department of College proper alone, working...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Fact and Comment | 12/10/1913 | See Source »

Princeton, N. J., November 25.--The most important event of the week ending Monday at Princeton was the vote of the members of Whig Hall to abolish secrecy in that institution. Whig is one of the two literary societies at Princeton, and it has been a secret organization since its foundation late in the eighteenth century. This step of doing away with secrecy in the Halls has been agitated by the Daily Princetonian and the Nassau Literary Magazine; Clio Hall, the other of the two institutions, has not yet had the matter before it for consideration. The vote in Whig...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: SECRET SOCIETIES ARE DOOMED | 11/26/1913 | See Source »

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