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Word: nothingness (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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To Harvard students. Visit the old established house of J. W. Brine. Clothing cleaned, pressed and repaired. Mr. Harry Haugh, the great London cutter, has charge of our custom department. His large experience at Cambridge and Oxford, England, enable him to do nothing but first class work. We are the...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 1/14/1886 | See Source »

Perhaps nothing is so frequently remarked upon by the visitor at our university, and especially by students from other colleges, than the great number of note-books seen in the hands and on the shelves of undergraduates. They are not the small, insignificant scribbling books used to jot down the...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Value of Good Notes. | 1/14/1886 | See Source »

The general idea men of other colleges have of Harvard, is that it is a place where no man should go unless he is abundantly supplied with cash, or has a fond and wealthy parent not too careful in examining his son's accounts, and that with this condition favorable...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Fair Harvard. | 1/13/1886 | See Source »

To Harvard students. Visit the old established house of J. W. Brine. Clothing cleaned, pressed and repaired. Mr. Harry Haugh, the great London cutter, has charge of our custom department. His large experience at Cambridge and Oxford, England, enable him to do nothing but first class work. We are the...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 1/13/1886 | See Source »

Yet there is around us, and in all our lives stuff enough to make good stories. And if there is not this material, we can never do much with what we borrow. A fellow need not necessarily confine himself to Adirondack deer hunts and the like; but almost any ordinary...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Scope of College Journalism. | 1/12/1886 | See Source »