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Word: admittedly (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
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Usage:

...Kelley said that the problem of poverty cannot be solved from above. The attempts of women to obtain even humane working laws are met with the arguments that such laws are unconstitutional. The judges admit that conditions in factories today are absolutely cruel, yet they say that women, with a few minor limitations, are citizens, and consequently cannot be deprived of their property rights...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: MRS. KELLEY ON "SUFFRAGE" | 11/1/1911 | See Source »

Opposed are eleven other men, differing in that they lack that confidence to be derived from gruelling games with teams of equal weight and skill. In many ways Harvard may be Brown's equal, but we must admit that so far we have met no eleven sufficiently powerful to cope with either our attack or defence. Here surely is a weakness...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: BROWN HERE TO WIN. | 10/28/1911 | See Source »

...Lost at Sea" Mr. Gilkey has wasted his finished metrical technique and his vivid sense of the rhythm of blank verse upon an incoherent story of a poetical cabin boy marooned upon a desert island by an ogre-like sea captain. Had the poem been long enough to admit of an explanation of the captain's hatred, the narrative might at least have seemed possible, but in the present clipped state of the poem horrid event follows horrid event without any logical sequence...

Author: By Henry BESTON Sheahan ., | Title: NEW ADVOCATE OUT TODAY | 10/28/1911 | See Source »

Although those of us who are freshmen now and those who look back upon freshman year as no period of prehistoric history do not like to be told of the "untried and untutored purity of our souls" in so many words, yet we must admit that it is perhaps the wisest and certainly the most generous explanation of our faults. The article is interesting inasmuch as the suggested remedy reveals the fact that there are some who believe that Harvard may be greatly benefited by a modification of her system upon lines resembling in a certain degree the preceptorial system...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: "THE FRESHMAN." | 10/20/1911 | See Source »

Season tickets at $3 each are now on sale at Leavitt & Peirce's, Wright & Ditson's, and the Co-operative. These tickets may be purchased by the public and each person may buy as many as he desires. They admit to all home games except those with Dartmouth and Yale...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Football Tickets Now on Sale | 9/28/1911 | See Source »

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