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

Tickets for the Yale game in rows BB and CC, sections 19 and 20, have been placed on sale by mistake. As the rows BB and CC do not exist, all persons holding these tickets may have them exchanged at the Athletic Office...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Error in Yale Game Seats | 6/13/1907 | See Source »

Somewhere in the still remembered past the men of Harvard marched out into the battlefields that were to decide if the Nation were to exist as the founders of our government had planned. Some marched out wearing the northern blue, while others in southern gray followed the call of "Dixie" and "The Bonnie Blue Flag." Today Harvard stands by right of foundation the first university of the New World and a College recognized by both northern and southern elements in America...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Communication | 5/1/1907 | See Source »

...find. The complete lack of it in "The Two Shippers" by H. V. Morgan '10, combined with an impossible plot, puts the story in the class of the unintentional burlesque. One is glad that the two college types suggested in the number are at least unobtrusive, if indeed they exist at all. The "Non-Conformer" in the third paper of Varied Outlooks by A. Davis 1L., in his self-sufficiency and in his arrogance of difference from ordinary human beings, is only less deformed than the unfortunate youth in "The Reckoning," by C. W. Wickersham 1L., who, having made...

Author: By W. R. Castle jr., | Title: Mr. Castle Reviews the Advocate | 5/1/1907 | See Source »

...first states that, although inequalities in ability exist and give rise to inventions, these should be common property, and not exclusively a source of wealth to the few who happen to find them. Mr. Mallock showed that such intricate inventions as are frequent nowadays would be of no use to men of limited capacity, as they could not understand their uses. Only minds fitted by education can profit by extensive discoveries...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Mr. Mallock's Lecture on Socialism | 2/26/1907 | See Source »

...some in another; some in things of the body, some in things of the mind; and where thousands are gathered together each will naturally find some group of specially congenial friends with whom he will form ties of peculiar social intimacy. These groups--athletic, artistic, scientific, social--must inevitably exist. My plea is not for their abolition. My plea is that they shall be got into the right focus in the eyes of college men; that the relative importance of the different groups shall be understood when compared with the infinitely greater life of the college as a whole...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: PRES. ROOSEVELT'S ADDRESS | 2/25/1907 | See Source »

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