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Word: contacter (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...goal seem both more desirable and more unobtainable. It was plain that the speaker, like every American who has been at Oxford and made a success there, felt keenly that no intellectual experience of his student life either at Harvard or in Europe has been as fine as his contact with his tutors at Baliol. The most justifiable kind of envy is the envy of a man caught in the machinery of one sort of educational mill for the chaps who are in another mill which he is perfectly certain has a better process than his own; better, that...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Educational Plan | 10/23/1920 | See Source »

...schedule of prices is as follows: Contact prints 25 cents each or $3 a dozen: 8x10 Bromide enlargements $1 each, $5 for six, or $10 a dozen. All work will be done by the Photographic Department in its own laboratory and darkroom, which is one of the best equipped in the vicinity of Boston...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: START PHOTO SALES SERVICE | 10/15/1920 | See Source »

...only one episode in a war which has been going on since December, 1918. The contest started almost as soon as the Polish state came into existence; and as soon as the Germans retired from the occupied district, thus allowing the Bolshevik and the Poles to come in contact. It was started by an invasion of Polish-speaking territory by the Bolsheviks, who at that moment were eager to break through into German territory, and expected to meet little resistance from the newly formed and quite unarmed Poland. Thus the war was forced on the Poles...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: "POLAND NOT AGGRESSOR AGAINST RUSSIA"-PROF. LORD | 10/13/1920 | See Source »

...their pro-German activities? As for friendly terms with Ireland, does Miss Taff know that American sailors were not allowed shore leave in Irish ports because attempts would be made against their LIVES by the "friendly" Irish? In my own small experience which, however, has brought me much in contact with the English, I have never heard an unkind word said or seen an uncourteous action towards me or any American. As I agree heartily in everything that the Editor of the CRIMSON said in his editorial of September 28 I will answer Miss Taff's nine conclusions as though...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: From an Ex-Service Man | 10/8/1920 | See Source »

...foreign students of the University last Friday evening in Phillips Brooks House recalls us to a privilege and a duty which the presence of these men from other lands gives us. It is one of the opportunities which we have during our stay at Harvard--this coming into direct contact not only with representative students from different sections of our own country, but also with men from every part of the globe. It is a privilege to rub shoulders with these men, who are the pick of their respective nations. Association with them will broaden our understanding of foreign countries...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE FOREIGN STUDENT | 10/4/1920 | See Source »

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