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

Besides interdormitory relay races, there will be the following events: a 45-yard high hurdle race, scratch, for men who have never before run in a hurdle race; a 45-yard high hurdle race, handicap, invitation; a potato-race, from which men who have won their H. A. A. are excluded; a three legged race, open to all members of the University; a two-mile cross country run, time handicap, open to all members of the University, a high jump, scratch, open only to men who have never won a prize in high-jumping; a high-jump, handicap, invitation...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: PLANS FOR TRACK CARNIVAL | 2/23/1907 | See Source »

Socialism, said Mr. Mallock, is still a theory, although it is often spoken of as existing and spreading. There has never been an actual condition of socialism, the nearest approaches having been co-operative organizations dependent on the ordinary means of production for their materials. When these have succeeded, they have gradually dropped their socialistic features, and have become ordinary individualistic organizations. Consistent socialism can not depend on private capitalism, but must supplant...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Mr. W. H. Mallock on Socialism | 2/21/1907 | See Source »

...University have a vital interest in athletics, even if for no other reason than that they do the largest share in supporting them, and they ought at least to know something about them. Publicity would also help athletics greatly, for under present circumstances such evils as there are never come out to be remedied, and the impossibility of getting information lends credence to every story that gets abroad. If athletics were run in the open, we might well rely on the general good sense of the undergraduate mind to correct all abuses of any moment, and to keep athletics thoroughly...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Communication | 2/6/1907 | See Source »

...trouble with New York, the trouble with practically all of the cities of our land, of which it is the type, is that all, alas, we who live there have thought of them in terms of money, never of men. And as we sowed, so have we reaped. Creat markets, great money centres, our cities have become little else. Even the amusements that are there are just a way of making money, or of spending it. Naturally, their politics have fallen under the same head. Graft is not a product but a corrupter of politics. And as to the source...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: ARTICLE BY JACOB RIIS | 1/26/1907 | See Source »

...along in the eighties, and straightway started an investigation of slavery in the tenement cigar-making industry. The action he brought about was labeled unconstitutional then--if I remember right--the fashion in labels has changed since under compulsion of accumulated evidence--but he learned something he has never forgotten. He is the same man who sits today in the White House demanding a fair chance for all the people, rich or poor, that the Republic may have a fair chance. Without that, it cannot have it. For, as I said, New York is but the type...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: ARTICLE BY JACOB RIIS | 1/26/1907 | See Source »

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