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

...will hereafter work in one division at 3 o'clock. The battery men will report at 2.45 o'clock, but any one who cannot come down at that hour should report as soon after as possible...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: CUT IN BASEBALL SQUAD | 3/16/1907 | See Source »

...last meeting of the Resident Executive Board it was voted to furnish twenty rooms in College House. This will afford opportunity for people outside of the University to come and make use of the libraries and laboratories for periods of less than a year. The rooms will be ready for occupancy by the first of September...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Furnished Rooms in College House | 3/12/1907 | See Source »

...Avenel divides the history of labor and its relation to the State into three periods, the servitude period, the free period, and the despotic period, the last of which is yet to come. But wages obey no laws prescribed by legislatures; they are governed solely by public opinion. State laws regarding labor are obeyed only so long as they coincide with natural laws...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: M. d'Avenel's Lecture Yesterday | 3/12/1907 | See Source »

Until recent times there has been no equality between the laborer and the employer; but such a condition has gradually come about regardless of the efforts to keep it down. In 1789 there was an ordinance passed called the "Liberty of Labor Act;" but the effect of this act upon the actual progress of industry was infinitesimal. The real factor which led to the equalization of laborer and employer, and which also laid the foundations for the great industries of the present, was the introduction of machinery...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: M. d'Avenel's Lecture Yesterday | 3/12/1907 | See Source »

...current number of the Graduates Magazine comes to us bristling with football which alone would suffice to make it timely, for the athletic confusion is just now at its height. The passage on football from the President's report appears, indeed, to have come out a bit ahead of time. The President's comments have been reprinted in the CRIMSON. They tell pretty much the old story, and popular feeling just now is clearly the other way; but the President addresses himself primarily, not to undergraduates, or to the public, but to the college authorities of the country; and with...

Author: By H. A. Bellows., | Title: Review of Graduates' Magazine | 3/11/1907 | See Source »

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