Word: exists
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...large courses. On the other hand, there are certain books which men are expected to buy for themselves and which we do not attempt to duplicate. There are, of course, others of which our supply of one or two copies is inadequate, and some such cases will doubtless always exist, since only a small sum (comparatively) can be devoted to dupli- cation without crippling the Library's purchases in other directions. Most of the money for duplication comes from special funds or special appropriations controlled by the various departments, and this must be the source principally to be depended...
...their extreme rarity. The Otto print, for example, is a unique impression, the Assumption of the Virgin is one of only four known impressions, and Pollajuolo's Gladiators, the only plate now believed to have been engraved by the artist, is one of but few impressions known to exist...
...measured in dollars and cents, but also the material benefit of taxable property; in other words, that the amount of taxable real and personal property which has been attracted to Cambridge by Harvard University and would not be there if Harvard were not there, exceeds the amount which would exist if the land now occupied by the College had been developed as the territory of Cambridge remote from the College has developed. These arguments have never been successfully controverted...
...live far away and to those who live near, and especially to those who are unable to go to their homes, the CRIMSON extends the merriest of holiday greetings. Comfortably resting far from nine o'clock recitations, the College Office, these, and all the other vexations of our Cambridge existence, one may wonder whether such things really exist; are they not rather a dream, a bad dream, full of a succession of never-ceasing worries invented to dog our weary footsteps? Almost convinced, we put the thought of them far back in the darkest and dustiest corner of our minds...
...lecture last night on "The Civic Functions of the Theatre," Mr. Percy MacKaye '97 maintained that a civic ideal for the theatre existed, but that it had at present no important influence on account of the lack of the proper means to realize it. This means is endowment, without which no public institution can exist...