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Word: labors (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Finance Club met last evening. Mr. G. H. Heilbron, '83, read a paper on "Free Labor in the South...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: FACT AND RUMOR. | 12/15/1882 | See Source »

...society who are intending to travel some distance over any of the through railroad lines during the coming Christmas recess. Signatures should be left today. Each member will please place his ticket number and the place to which he will go opposite his name. This will save some labor to those who volunteer to see what can be done in the matter...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 12/13/1882 | See Source »

...Theatre this evening, and a pleasant time and successful programme will undoubtedly be enjoyed. Every one should attend both as a matter of pleasure and of duty. If the concert is to be a financial success, it is necessary that a readier support be given the two organizations which labor so faithfully for the entertainment of the college, and that a far larger attendance result than is assured thus far by the sale of tickets...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 12/11/1882 | See Source »

...School, who lately presented him with a "loving cup" of farewell. His letter concludes as follows: "I hope that when another hundred and fifty years have passed away, some descendant of mine will say, as he lifts this cup, and reads the name it bears, 'He, too, loved his labor and those for whom he labored, and the students of the dead nineteenth century remembered their old teacher as kindly, as gracefully, as generously, as the youth of the earlier eighteenth century remembered old Father Flynt, the patriarch of all our Harvard tutors...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: FACT AND RUMOR. | 12/6/1882 | See Source »

...those of the outside world who are wont to rail at the jeunesse doree and the "petted aristocracy" of our colleges, and particularly of Harvard, we commend as a very instructive instance of the much talked of fastidiousness and aversion to manual labor on the part of collegians, the occurrence of last Saturday forenoon on Holmes field, when, manfully seizing shovels and scrapers, two hundred Harvard students applied themselves with a will to the labor of clearing the entire field and benches of snow. This, it should be remembered, was a labor purely voluntary on their part and performed without...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 11/21/1882 | See Source »

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