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Word: effecting (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Tomorrow has been proclaimed by the President of the United States a day upon which all churchmen shall congregate and offer prayers for peace. Whatever one's faith in the efficacy of prayers there is no doubt but that indirectly through the effect on the men themselves such a proclamation can result in great good. There could be no more auspicious occasion for all those who have as yet failed to attend service to begin the cultivation of the habit than tomorrow,--Peace Sunday...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: PEACE SUNDAY. | 10/3/1914 | See Source »

William Cameron Forbes '02 and Major Higginson '55 spoke of Harvard as a college which gives one the ability to handle and deal with men. Major Higginson dealt at length with the European situation and the effect it will have...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: FRESHMEN HAVE FIRST RALLY | 9/30/1914 | See Source »

...following resignations were received and accepted to take effect September 1, 1914: Ernest H. Caswell as Instructor in Operative Dentistry; John Crowe Ransom as Assistant in English; Howard Moffitt Trueblood as Assistant in Physics...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: SELECT ADMINISTRATIVE BOARDS | 9/30/1914 | See Source »

Although the European hostilities seem to have had no effect on the number of students entering the University this fall, their effect will be keenly felt by the loss of several members of the university faculty who were rendered unable to return on account of the war. Professor Georges Mauxion, head of the department of design in the College of Architecture and Professor O. G. Guerlac, of the French department, were both called to arms at the outbreak of the war and were forced to return to France to rejoin their regiments. A small number of undergraduates, natives...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: RECORD ENROLLMENT AT CORNELL | 9/29/1914 | See Source »

...Harvard as an effeminate luxury--and that all the rooms are furnished by the College. Rents range from $35 to $225, which will materially bring down the cost of the average freshman's bill of expense. The furnishing is uniform, but in excellent, simple taste, and the whole effect is such that most graduates who visit these halls will, we are sure, wish they might go to College all over again, not only because of the quiet of these groups, which ought speedily to have a genuine academic atmosphere, with their fine lawns, their flower-beds, and their new-planted...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Fact and Comment | 9/28/1914 | See Source »

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