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Word: classicized (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Rain, for the second time this week, kept practice for the University eleven comparatively light yesterday. Although Coach Fisher has no intention of submitting his first-string men to the possibility of injury before the annual classic with Yale, yet the drill so far has consisted of little more than signal practice...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Seconds Use Tufts Plays | 11/14/1919 | See Source »

...preface to the annual late season classic, the Army and Navy games with Notre Dame and Georgetown respectively are attracting considerable interest. Both teams as yet have had no serious tests and the results of these contests will in a measure, indicate their strength...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: WHISTLES SHRILL FOR KICK-OFFS IN 116 GRIDIRON CONTESTS | 11/8/1919 | See Source »

...classic in terseness and biting sarcasm is President Lowell's letter to Professor Franz Keibel of the University of Koenigsberg. The latter is answered in a tone which ought to be applied to many more Germans and to the German Government itself; "If you can prove to me that you protested against the burning of the Library at Louvain, and that you endeavored to secure protection and that you endeavored to secure protection and such treatment as you now request for the professors of the universities in the Belgian and French territory occupied by the Germans, then I will exert...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: A REAL ANSWER. | 10/28/1919 | See Source »

...movement claims for its foundation the following facts: first, the teaching profession is notoriously underpaid. The life of the late Carleton Parker offers a classic example of the way an adequate salary will increase the productivity of a teacher. Second, the wretchedly weak administration of Boards of Education render good pedagogy almost impossible. However this concerns primarily the public school system and does not touch Harvard...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: IS TEACHING LABOR? | 5/26/1919 | See Source »

This course was instituted twelve years ago by several influential Harvard alumni, notably Charles O. Brewster '76, and the Harvard Department of Music--the object being to provide perfectly free opportunity for all students in the University to begin an acquaintanceship, at any rate, with standard works of classic and modern musical literature. The feeling was that no one should claim to be a cultivated man of letters unless his general knowledge of music was somewhat on a par with that which is reasonably taken for granted by the world in such other arts as poetry, prose, painting, and architecture...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Communication | 2/20/1919 | See Source »

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