Word: belongings
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...they are opposed. That opposition ought to be recognized. A careful study of courses now open to undergraduates and graduates would reveal some that should be listed "Primarily for graduates," others properly open to undergraduates only, and not a few which might profitable be dropped. In the latter category belong a large percentage of the survey courses, of which the college notoriously has a surplus. Such an arrangement would not bar properly qualified undergraduates from advanced courses any more than it does today. It would eliminate the ambiguity of purpose which clouds much lecturing here and help to raise...
...victor belong the goal posts providing he can take them away...
...Great Britain, where telephones & telegraphs belong to His Majesty's Post Office, nearly 18,000 likely householders received last week this telegram: I CORDIALLY INVITE YOU TO BECOME A TELEPHONE SUBSCRIBER NOW, SO THAT YOU MAY ENJOY THE ADVANTAGES AND COMFORTS OF TELEPHONE SERVICE DURING THE COMING WINTER.- KINGSLEY WOOD, POSTMASTER GENERAL...
Nobody can eat or drink pearls. Unlike Brazilians who burned their coffee to raise prices, and unlike "striking" Midwest farmers who have destroyed food that did not belong to them, Mr. Mikimoto had burned up last week nothing edible or useful and nothing that was not his own. From the fiery furnace he stepped back a unique hero of the Depression. Pearls mean little to him. What he had really burned up was his lifelong dream...
Three hundred and sixty four days out of the year, the word Dartmouth brings to mind the charming jumble of dirty corduroys, of snow statues, of large D's on green chests, of things, in fact, that belong to a race apart, a far cry from the Harvard man's conception of Harvard men. During the next twenty-four hours alone will Dartmouth men appear comprehensible; for after the game there comes Hanover. In its first real game, Harvard therefore welcomes today the continuation of a friendly rivalry, and the brief opportunity to observe the Dartmouth man freed...