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

...University wrestling championships held in the Gymnasium last night, the following men will compete in the finals: 135-pound class--H. W. Bradley '12 will meet E. W. Ottle '11; 145-pound class--C. A. Dunham '11 will meet W. D. Wile 2L.; 158-pound class--R. M. Page 1L. will meet F. L. Cooper...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Fencing and Wrestling Bout Results | 2/18/1911 | See Source »

...pounds--P. R. Danner uC., W. M. Danner '13, C. A. Dunham '11, E. W. Ottie '11, S. P. Speer '13, R. Vicario '14; 145 pounds--T. R. Holbert 2L., R. E. Parry '14, W. D. Wile 2L.; 158 pounds--N. Morris '14, G. D. Osgood '12, R. M. Page 1L., W. H. Warren '12, J. Wentworth...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Preliminary Wrestling Bouts at 8 | 2/17/1911 | See Source »

...another page in a communication is quoted an extract from the "New York Times" of recent date. In this article the conditions at Harvard are misstated. It this were merely an isolated instance of journalistic misrepresentation, it would call for no comment. However, this small news item typifies a large number of similar stories relating to Harvard in the press of the whole country. During the current year, a fiagrant instance of this sort of perversion occurred. A Cleveland paper appeared with the startling announcement that the CRIMSON had accused the football coaches of teaching the men to violate...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: HARVARD AND THE PRESS. | 2/6/1911 | See Source »

...communication printed on another page concerning the recent mid-year examination in English 2 makes interesting reading. A three-hour test with 61 sub-divisions can hardly be called typical of Harvard examinations, nevertheless it does represent a type of examinations only too common in the College at present...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: EXAMINATIONS OR MEMORY TESTS? | 2/4/1911 | See Source »

...HARVARD CRIMSON, daily paper to the University and dispenser of advertisements that those who run to 'nine-o'clocks' may read, came forth Thursday morning with an editorial on 'Dramatics at Harvard' sandwiched into a page of frantic commercial appeals from people who make the sort of breakfast food that produces brain tissue and the sort of cigarette 'that every college boy smokes.' And the CRIMSON--or as it is affectionately known at Harvard, 'The Crime'--informed its readers that, however the college graduate flourished on Broadway, the state of dramatics--and by this it meant principally acting--within...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Injudicious Publicity. | 2/1/1911 | See Source »

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