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

...same reasoning applies in a measure to the University of Pennsylvania, with its 10,321 students; to New York University, with its 9695; California, with its 9208, and Michigan, with its 9800. All of those institutions and others like them are rendering a public service of tremendous dimensions...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: 1919 RECORD-BREAKING YEAR FOR AMERICAN COLLEGES | 12/6/1919 | See Source »

These lectures are given on Wednesday and Friday afternoons throughout the fall term under the auspices of the Division of Fine Arts and are open to the public...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: "Buddhist Sculpture" Lecture Topic | 12/5/1919 | See Source »

...London there is a little colony of Harvard men gathered together for the purpose of learning. All of them are holders of graduate fellowships of one sort and another, and their days are spent in the British Museum and in the Public Records Office. The CRIMSON has recently received from one of them, Samuel Resneck '19, a letter telling of their life...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: COLONY OF HARVARD SCHOLARS STUDYING IN BRITISH MUSEUM | 12/5/1919 | See Source »

...Solving the Riddle of the Universe" should be the title of the work that has been going on for the past thirty years in the University Observatory. Night after night and year after year, without ostentation or public applause, the astronomers have been combing the heavens, searching among the millions of other worlds, their sole purpose being to add to the sum of human knowledge. Of all the new stars discovered since 1886, Harvard has the honor of claiming seventy per cent...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: HARVARD'S TRIUMPHS IN ASTRONOMY. | 12/5/1919 | See Source »

...ought to be good news to the musical public in Boston and in Harvard University that the Harvard Glee Club is planning a season in which the new standards which have been set up for college singing in Cambridge will be so clearly illustrated. Boston has always owed much to Harvard for its best music. The Harvard Musical Association, founded by Harvard men who wanted to preserve the musical interests which the Pierian Sodality had awakened in them, established more than fifty years ago the orchestral concerts to which, in a natural sequence, the concerts of the Boston Symphony Orchestra...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Good News | 12/4/1919 | See Source »

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