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Word: currently (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1880-1889
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Usage:

...second competition in the current series of shotgun matches will be shot at Watertown, this afternoon. The scores made in this and the next competition will count as qualifying for prizes. The entry fee for both competitions is 50 cents...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: H. S. C. | 3/4/1885 | See Source »

EDITORS DAILY CRIMSON.-A plan has been proposed of placing in the library reading-room a careful selection of newspaper articles upon the most important topics of current interest. These articles are to be clipped from all the best American and from the leading English journals, to be arranged under proper heads, and then to be pasted in scrap books, each of which will be devoted to a separate subject. The clippings will be renewed from week to week, and when the collection upon any topic is complete, it will be filed away for future reference. For example, the English...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Communications. | 3/3/1885 | See Source »

Walter I. Badger, captain of the Yale champions of 1882, has an article in the current number of The New Englander, on "Professionalism in College Athletics; Cause and Remedy...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Fact and Rumor. | 3/3/1885 | See Source »

...shall not lack its proportionate effect. True, all future events are determined, but only because their antecedents were determined first: and so far from the truth is it that we cannot change our destiny, that in fact we cannot but change it. If we work, we turn the current of our lives in one direction; if we do not work, we turn it in the other...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 2/25/1885 | See Source »

...therefore free as a stream is free when it flows unobstructed, yet whose essence, like the essence of the stream, is motion and action. Now this will, by its free activity might enslave itself to passion or ambition, somewhat as the stream, by the force of its own current, might heap up obstacles in its way; yet with this difference, that the stream gathers these obstacles from its bed, while the will finds its dangers only in the intellect of which it is the expression. And as the stream, choked by what it has collected, is stemmed and blocked, until...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 2/25/1885 | See Source »

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