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Word: widing (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...yards, which he gave to deSelding. Prout overcame this lead, and Gram got away a few yards ahead of Merrihew in the last relay. With a lap to go, Merrihew set out to catch Gram and was even with him at the first corner. Here Gram ran a bit wide and Merrihew, in trying to take the pole, collided with him, both runners falling. The Harvard man was the first to regain his feet, and finished six yards in the lead...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: HARVARD WON RELAY RACE | 1/24/1910 | See Source »

Those Freshmen who receive the responsibility of office should spare no effort to meet all of their classmates and in every way in which they are able to promote class feeling and class unity. Without a wide acquaintance they will find it impossible to make the appointments to their various committees just and representative, and unless this is done the committees will fail to be effective in their work...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE FRESHMAN ELECTIONS. | 1/19/1910 | See Source »

...much lessened if the eligibility rules were so changed as to permit men who finish their College course in three years to remain in athletics another year while studying for the degree of A. M. in the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. To establish eligibility on its original wide basis is hardly desirable, for to do so would mean a new crop of the old petty questions which were continually arising up to 1905. To make the change would probably require the consent of Princeton and Yale, which are parties to the agreement and would involve the granting...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: ELIGIBILITY RULES AND THE THREE-YEAR DEGREE. | 1/5/1910 | See Source »

This convention will be of unusual importance in that one of its chief objects will be to bring about an affiliation of the American association with the Corda Fratres, looking toward a world-wide union of students in the cause of "international peace and the universal brotherhood of man." Reports will be read from the different clubs in America showing the progress of Cosmopolitanism in the United States...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Cosmopolitan Clubs Meet Tomorrow | 12/21/1909 | See Source »

...progress of dentistry during the past sixty years has been extraordinary. Indeed, dentistry as a profession requiring a wide range of varied knowledge and a high degree of skill of eye and hand may almost be said to have been created within that period. The work to be done by the dentist, and his materials and apparatus for doing that work are, for the most part, applications of three sciences: chemistry, physics, and biology, which have each made rapid progress since the middle of the nineteenth century. To the progress of applied chemistry, dentistry owes a large number of valuable...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: DENTAL SCHOOL DEDICATION | 12/9/1909 | See Source »

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