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Word: sounded (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1920
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Usage:

...more advanced work of the School is carried on in seminaries and laboratories and special courses, with a large amount of individual instruction, all planned for the purpose of training students in exact and independent methods so that they may in turn carry on the traditions of sound learning and enlarge the world's knowledge of nature and of man. Its ideal, it has been said, is "to develop Harvard as one of the great centres of the world's scholarship, conserving the learning of the past and constantly widening the bounds of knowledge...

Author: By Dean CHARLES H. haskins, (SPECIAL ARTICLE FOR THE CRIMSON) | Title: "FOSTERS ADVANCED LEARNING AND RESEARCH"-HASKINS | 12/20/1920 | See Source »

...Sullivan has survived the dangers of reporter, newspaper owner, Washington correspondent, editor of a sound magazine, and special political correspondent of the New York Evening Post. He is an example of what journalism may be, and what it may become. His career reflects credit on this College, on the Law School, and on himself...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: DESCRIBES GAG IMPOSED ON REPORTERS AT PARIS | 12/14/1920 | See Source »

...classes, and you will make more acquaintances than you can make in any other way. Those of us who are interested in athletics are sometimes accused of over emphasizing the importance of our sports, but I do not think that there is anyone who will not admit that a sound body is just as essential as a sound mind. That Harvard University endorses this fact is evidenced by compulsory exercise for all Freshmen, and the approval by the Faculty of University athletic teams...

Author: By Ex-captain WILLIAM J. bingham and University TRACK Supervisor., (SPECIAL ARTICLE FOR THE CRIMSON)S | Title: "GET IN ON THE GROUND FLOOR," URGES BINGHAM | 12/6/1920 | See Source »

...numbers correctly. These have been pushed into the background "by all sorts of enterprises that have their origin in emotionalism, in ignorance, or in mere vanity." A great deal of what Mr. Butler says about our plumbing for the full and free expression among the school children is sound. Sound is his protest against our forgetting the principle that every generation can only climb higher by standing "on the shoulders of its predecessors." But this very surrender to emotionalism, to ignorance, or to mere vanity is proof of a desire to teach not the secret of making a living...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Communication | 12/1/1920 | See Source »

...east resting all too complacently on the fallacious assumption that because their teams do represent the staid old east they play the superior brand of football. Fans in the west have for some time now quite strenuously objected to this unwarranted supposition, and deny that there is any sound basis for it until it is proven in actual play on the gridiron...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: COMMENT | 11/17/1920 | See Source »

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