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

...Higginson '10 won the fifth shooting club medal last week with a score of 88. C. F. Morse '10 with a handicap of 5, and J. Heard '12 with a handicap of 11 tied for second place with 86 out of possible...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Higginson Won Fifth Shooting Medal | 11/16/1908 | See Source »

...good shooting. The best individual score was made by Hammer of Yale, with 43 out of a possible 50, McLoughlin of Harvard having the next best score of 40. Following are the teams and individual scores: HARVARD 1912. YALE 1912. McLoughlin, 40 Hammer, 43 Fry, 36 Dimock, 37 Heard, 36 Stone, 36 Lewis, 26 Dickinson, 33 Howell, 25 Clarke...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: 1912 Shooting Team Lost to Yale | 11/9/1908 | See Source »

...seems almost destructive were it not for the fact that it can never be removed in spirit but will continue with us for generations. Few of us have known him personally but each time we have seen him we have admired him a little more; each time we have heard him we have gained a better conception of his power of insight which has seen goals that many men of good vision have been blind to; each time we have seen him honored by men of all callings, we have been proud of him and glad that he is ours...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: PRESIDENT ELIOT, 1869-1909. | 11/5/1908 | See Source »

...deepest and most durable ideals; and with almost a religious fervor he brought these to bear on every aspect of the petty and careless life around him. He has been a preacher of reverence to a headlong age. And if sometimes a despairing note has been heard in his voice, it has been perhaps a necessary corrective of overconfident America...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: CHARLES ELIOT NORTON '46 | 10/23/1908 | See Source »

...very first thought which students in Fine Arts 4 heard Professor Norton express was "excellence"; for he used to preface his lectures with a quotation beginning "A nation once so excellent." And this idea of excellence, of which so few of the thousands of his hearers had any true conception before they listened to his talk, was the keynote of most that he had to say to them. The course professed to be about Greek art, and certainly nobody was better qualified to illuminate that subject; but it was wonderful to observe how he showed that such a seemingly dead...

Author: By M. H. Morgan., | Title: PROF. NORTON'S FUNERAL | 10/23/1908 | See Source »

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