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Word: among (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1880-1889
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...Protection encourages (a) ideas of socialism, and, (b) among protectionists, false ideas of what the government's relation to them ought to be. The labor problem is made more difficult.- Fawcett, ibid, E. L. Godkin, in New Princeton Review for March...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: English VI. | 2/25/1888 | See Source »

...Protection causes political evil by endangering (a) corruption among the law-makers, and (b,) hatred among our industrial classes.- W. G. Sumner, Lectures on History of Protection, p. 165; Grosvenor, Does Protection Protect...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: English VI. | 2/25/1888 | See Source »

...this meeting, as the first class dinner is a pleasant as well as important event in college life. By its means the members of a class are all brought together in a pleasant, social way that goes far towards strengthening the bonds of fellowship and friendship which should exist among the members of every class. The tendency at the present age is for all class feeling to be obliterated or swallowed up by the division into cliques and clubs. But as every college man is of necessity more or less identified with his class, so the importance of these class...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 2/24/1888 | See Source »

...Reading to be held in Sander's Theatre on the evening of Feb. 27th, we feel that we are advocating a highly worthy object. It may, perhaps, be well to state that the reading is given in aid of the Longfellow Memorial Fund, and that several well-known authors, among them Julia Ward Howe, Edward Everett Hale and Thomas Wentworth Higginson, have promised to read selections from their works. The entertainment cannot fail to be interesting, and the object is so worthy that we are anxious to impress on all that it is their duty to attend. Even if attendance...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 2/23/1888 | See Source »

...took place on Tuesday evening at Delmonico's. In addition to the gentlemen there were many ladies present in the galleries of the large dining hall, which are always especially reserved for the fair sex at these Harvard dinners. Mr. Edmund C. Wetmore, the president of the club, presided. Among the guests of the evening were President Eliot, General W. T. Sherman, Prof. G. H. Balmer, Rev. Dr. Henry Van Dyke of Princeton, Chauncey M. Depew of Yale, Mayor Abram S. Hewitt of Columbia, and General Charles J. Paine. President Eliot responded eloquently to the toast "Our Alma Mater." Among...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Twenty-Second Annual Dinner of the Harvard Club of New York. | 2/23/1888 | See Source »

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