Search Details

Word: exists (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first (reverse)


Usage:

Competitors will be expected to discuss the following points: Should personal property be taxed at all? Should some kinds of personal property be taxed and other kinds be exempt from taxation? The relation of personal property taxes, if any exist, to other taxes in a rational system of taxation. The changes in our laws needed to establish a better system of taxation. It is expected in brief that taxation of personal property will be taken as a starting point of the entire investigation, and that all inquiries will be made to centre in this; that defects in American state...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Prize Essay. | 3/8/1890 | See Source »

There seems still to be doubt in the minds of several instructors as to the advisability of giving out the mid-year marks in their courses. We cannot see why this hesitation should exist. It is only just that men should be given a chance to know how they stand. Often a student finds it quite impossible to tell whether he is doing satisfactory work in lines of study entirely new to him. A man trying for honors, or a scholarship, also, is greatly handicapped by not knowing how an instructor regards his work. He may have failed to understand...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 2/27/1890 | See Source »

...best to keep the paper up to the standard set by the Ninety board, and to continue the progress made under their leadership, for we believe that the CRIMSON has made a constant advance during the last year. We are not blind to the fact that faults still exist, and that there are opportunities open to a college daily paper which have never yet been fully seized upon by any Harvard publication. It will be our aim to remedy any faults we may find, and to make the CRIMSON fill a more important position in college life, and become more...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 2/11/1890 | See Source »

...such a position he should be most severely blamed for his disloyalty to college; for it may naturally be supposed that he is a Harvard man. In these days Harvard is being sufficiently attacked on almost every side for a host of imaginary evils which, it is declared, exist within her walls. The press throughout the country is ever ready to seize upon and largely exaggerate any slight report which may contain ground for an attack on the college. Therefore it is, that the correspondent is culpable of gross disloyalty to his college, first-if he be sincere-in compiling...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Comparative Growth of Harvard and Yale. | 2/5/1890 | See Source »

...social life grows every year. The Fay house is made much more a center for the students than it used to be, and this tends to increase the spirit of fellowship. this spirit is further increased by the various clubs which exist among the students. The meetings of the Emmanuel society have been of especial interest this year. Recent ones have been addressed by Mrs. Professor Palmer and Mrs. George Chaplain, and at the next one Professor F. G. Peabody will speak. The meetings of the Idler club have also been very pleasant, and the new English club has proven...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Annex. | 1/17/1890 | See Source »

First | Previous | 2391 | 2392 | 2393 | 2394 | 2395 | 2396 | 2397 | 2398 | 2399 | 2400 | 2401 | 2402 | 2403 | 2404 | 2405 | 2406 | 2407 | 2408 | 2409 | 2410 | 2411 | Next | Last