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

...Cause. The individual soldiers are not to be blamed. The fault lies deeper yet. It is with the American public at home who insist upon regarding war as a glorious sport at which our athletes are in nature bound to win. Parade after parade, motion pictures, books, and pamphlets confirm it. Our newspapers describe in four-inch headlines of alternated red and black how five "Yanks" have captured a German patrol of twenty, while on page five, under a flaring advertisement of some chewing gum company, we find the official British and French communications of attacks in which thousands have...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: AMERICAN HYSTERIA | 4/12/1918 | See Source »

...athletic heart when subjected to the careful investigation of instruments of precision is usually shown to be a normal heart. A good proportion of the oarsmen examined had been told previously for one reason or another that they were suffering from athletic hearts; yet our investigation failed to confirm the presence of any abnormality that was not entirely consistent with a normal heart...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: ATHLETICS PRODUCE NO BAD EFFECTS ON HEART | 2/10/1917 | See Source »

...course of a year many young men who are carrying the burden of a diagnosis of athletic or strained heart. Thus far, in the absence of a previously damaged heart due to some inflammatory condition of the valves, I have been unable to confirm the diagnosis of an abnormal heart. My feeling is that much harm is being done by the popular impression that athletics are a frequent cause of heart disease. I have tried to show that in some aspects at least this diagnosis has been based upon incorrect criteria. I find considerable comfort in the vigorous statements...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: ATHLETICS PRODUCE NO BAD EFFECTS ON HEART | 2/10/1917 | See Source »

...first number of the Collegian--a fortnightly "newspaper intended to represent the views and opinions of Harvard students"--began the present era of University journalism. The Collegian was outspoken and caustic in tone. It deplored the "little disposition manifested by the instructors to establish and confirm a friendship between the student and themselves"; it attacked with keen satire compulsory church attendance on Sunday and the system of compulsory chapel. After its third issue the Collegian was suppressed by the Faculty, and the editors were forbidden under pain of expulsion to publish any paper whatsoever...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: ADVOCATE FIRST PUBLICATION TO PASS HALF-CENTURY MARK | 5/17/1916 | See Source »

...editorials are sane, illuminating, and well-written; the review of two collections of recent poetry is intelligent and competent. These concluding articles confirm the impression made by the number as a whole; the Monthly is frankly and unaffectedly literary, alive to recent tendencies and events, but still respectful toward standards other than its editors', and reassuringly free from extremes, poses, and "isms" of the baser sort...

Author: By F. SCHENCK ., | Title: Current Monthly Reveals Alertness | 5/9/1916 | See Source »

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