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

...Berle, Jr., '13 was the third speaker and chose the affirmative for his argument. The present infairness to the French peasant could best be corrected by the income tax, yet this tax is felt much less by the rich man than by the poor man. There is an inequality of sacrifice. But the solution is that the rich man should be taxed more in proportion to his income. In this way the income tax would force the people to be perfectly honest. France's income would be increased and the national debt would be diminished. An income tax more nearly...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: DISCUSSION OF INCOME TAX | 12/17/1909 | See Source »

...commended perhaps more for its variety than its quality. Even geographically reckoned, the range of subject-matter is passing great; from China to the shores of Lake Michigan; from Canada to the other world of Orpheus. This is as it should be; the undergraduate mind has ever felt free to embrace the world entire, both fact and fancy. One expects to find, however, in that embrace more real grip than is evident in the present instance. With but few exceptions, the pieces have the fussiness of old age, without the latter's choice reflectiveness; they lack the urgent passion...

Author: By H. DEW. Fuller., | Title: Monthly Reviewed by Dr. Fuller | 12/10/1909 | See Source »

...current academic year. For many years past it has been customary to hold vesper services on Thursday afternoons between Thanksgiving and Easter. The service consisted of a musical program and a short address by a well-known preacher. Whether the lack of such a service will be felt keenly enough to warrant its re-installment another year cannot now be foretold...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Vesper Services to be Omitted | 11/27/1909 | See Source »

...opening of the football season this fall Harvard men felt that with eleven "H" men in College and Coach Haughton again as head coach, the prospects for turning out a successful team seemed very bright. However, the usual series of misfortunes and accidents has prevented the team from developing as fast as some had hoped. Of the last year's team, Crowley, through trouble in his studies, was not allowed to play; West, Dunlap, Corbett, P. D. Smith, McKay and G. G. Browne have all been injured in such a way that they have been prevented from playing in several...

Author: By I. Babbitt., | Title: REVIEW OF HARVARD SEASON | 11/20/1909 | See Source »

...that account bold enough to speak in behalf of delegates from universities and colleges in Great Britain, France, Germany, Denmark, Bohemia, Switzerland, Holland, Norway, Cuba, Cape of Good Hope, and New Zealand. Sir, I convey to you on behalf of all these a message of heart-felt congratulation and good wishes on the occasion of your inauguration in the words of the cable message which I have just received from Emmanuel College: 'May you enjoy a tenure, long, illustrious, and worthy alike of the illustrious traditions of your office and of the name you bear...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: INAUGURATION COMPLETED | 10/8/1909 | See Source »

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