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

...period of war, the loan exhibition which opens tomorrow afternoon at the Fogg Art Museum will have a double appeal. In the first place the exhibition itself, comprised of valuable loans from many of the largest American art collections, has been carefully and tastefully selected to represent the whole history and scope of modern French art. Secondly the collection has been brought together in commemoration of the devoted services of those seven French officers who, assigned here as instructors, taught to so many members of the University the ways of modern...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: CAPTAIN MORIZE SPEAKS. | 4/9/1919 | See Source »

...assent, but there are, on the other hand, some indications that men are beginning to look over their wall. One of these is the Harvard Magazine, the second number of which has just appeared. At last, praise be, a single publication has ventured to invite to its columns the whole university, instructors as well as students, Radcliffe as well as Harvard, and to discuss other than purely academic interests. Therefore, it is seven times welcome, and if in so new an essay it makes mistakes--as it surely will--seventy times seven to be forgiven. Its editors can well afford...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: CURRENT HARVARD MAGAZINE SHOWS PROGRESSIVE TREND | 4/9/1919 | See Source »

...fiction is concerned we are not disappointed. Mr. Kister, who, judged by his two stories, loves the tactual, tells his grim tale well. Mr. Davidson although we early guess half of the denouement of his romance, nevertheless surprises us with the other half, and throughout the whole tale gives joyously vivid pictures of a West, not yet, we hope, wholly departed. His characters are alive, and the wind blows. In Balked Mr. Raffalovich burlesques certain modern fads, but such fads, even in burlesques, are worth neither the expenditure of Mr. Raffalovich's gifts nor the time of the paper maker...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: CURRENT HARVARD MAGAZINE SHOWS PROGRESSIVE TREND | 4/9/1919 | See Source »

...Young Democracy" (Perhaps the name should be "Young Bolshevism"), a new radical sheet published in New York, has revived the whole wretched business of the hazing of our Freshman Bolshevik under the caption "Hitting Heresy at Harvard." The article tells the story of the hazing, the stand of the Harvard Liberal Club, and quotes the CRIMSON's editorial which said "Freedom of conscience is one of the principles for which Harvard has always stood." So far these youthful gentlemen have no fault to find. They continue by stating the steps that the University has taken to safeguard free speech...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: PATTING OURSELVES ON THE BACK. | 4/9/1919 | See Source »

...unavoidable consequence of the disturbed state of college affairs last fall, the opening of the second term found the Freshman Class lodged partially in the Yard and partially in the Freshman dormitories. This enforced division has resulted in a noticeable failure of the class to fuse into one unified whole...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE FRESHMAN SMOKER. | 4/9/1919 | See Source »

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