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

Regulations: "No student is permitted to take any books or papers into the examination room except by express direction of the instructor. No communication is permitted between students in the examination room on any subject whatever...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: LIST OF FINAL EXAMINATIONS | 5/18/1910 | See Source »

...second University crew will leave Thursday on the Federal Express for Philadelphia where it will take part in the American Henley Regatta on Saturday. The crew has been entered in two of the races, the Stewart Challenge Cup and the Puritan Challenge Cup, over the Henley course of one mile and 550 yards on the Schuylkill river. It is probable that the crew will row a practice race of one mile in the Basin today against the Technology and the Union Boat Club crews. The eight so far has shown exceptional speed for the Henley distance and should do well...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: 2nd Crew Rows at Henley Saturday | 5/17/1910 | See Source »

...column than in the news. Students today are prone to take on an assumption of vacuity, which of necessity is reflected in the editorials. They are not up to the standard of the rest of the paper and there is place for a man of force and personality to express his own opinions. The undergraduate is at college to get ideas, but as long as he pretends to be unwilling to do this, the influence of the editorials of college dailies must be weak. It is in that line that improvement is to be looked...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: PURPOSE OF COLLEGE LIFE | 5/13/1910 | See Source »

...student is permitted to take any books or papers into the examination room except by express direction of the instructor. No communication is permitted between students in the examination room on any subject whatever...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Final List of Make-up Examinations | 5/6/1910 | See Source »

...great and none too common merit of being worth reading. Whether it is worth preserving I am not so sure; but the articles on matters of immediate interest to Harvard men, of which the number is almost wholly made up, are certainly just now very much worth while. They express and stimulate ideas, and this statement is high praise. Dean Castle's answer to Mr. Lippmann's objections to the Freshman dormitory scheme is exactly what we have long been hoping for: a public defence, from a man intimately acquainted with the facts and conditions, of one of the most...

Author: By H. A. Bellows ., | Title: Advocate Review by H. A. Bellows '06 | 4/27/1910 | See Source »

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