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Word: conflict (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1900-1909
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Usage:

...schedules can be arranged so as not to conflict, Harvard and Yale may play in both leagues...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Intercollegiate Basketball. | 5/20/1901 | See Source »

...various Law School courses is as follows: Constitutional Law, 91 Property II, 192 Contracts II, 21 Corporations, 153 Agency, 148 Equity III, 207 Bills and Notes, 129 Suretyship, 65 Contracts I, 256 Insurance, 63 Sales, 169 Property III, 57 Evidence, 191 Bankruptcy, 45 Admiralty, 27 Persons, 25 Damages, 16 Conflict of Laws, 49 Trusts, 200 Torts, 259 Pleading, 264 Partnership, 22 Criminal Law, 251 Property I, 261 --- Total...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Registration in Law School Courses. | 5/17/1901 | See Source »

Each religion has its keynote; that of Confucianism was order, of Zoroastrianism conflict, of Hinduism reality, and of Hebraism, holiness. Every religion is the idealism of the thought of the nation that brought it forth. Therefore to understand the religion of a nation one must study that nation's characteristics. The Hebrews were originally a nomadic tribe and as such possessed a nomadic cult, which had much in common with the later monotheistic idea. Like all nations, the Hebrews had two sides to their national character. The world y ambition and soldiery qualities of the Maccabees and the like...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Lecture by Dr. Adler. | 2/21/1901 | See Source »

...public men had their way on all of them. So long as the North did not revolt against declining tariff duties, or insistently demand internal improvements, or try to tear down the subtreasurers and clamor for a bank, it could not be said that there was any irrepressible conflict of any industrial sort. So far, then, as hindsight avails, the Southerners in 1850 could not have seen any threat to their civilization from specific material interests in the North. It was the North's moral awakening and not its industrial alertness, its free thought and not its free labor which...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Lecture on the Lower South. | 12/15/1900 | See Source »

...would be a great boon if a Pastoral History of the Church could be written. It would exhibit the Church in its most attractive and beneficent light, engaged in doing good instead of being a scene of conflict. Chaucer's description of the Parish Priest, supposed to be modelled on Wycliffe, may be taken as a kind of type of the Pastor...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Last Noble Lecture. | 12/11/1900 | See Source »

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