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

...instituted, who should know the names and records of offenders. Furthermore, if fewer peddling licenses were issued, if police stations were closed to tramps who might better be confined in places where work was exacted, and if blind and crippled children were attended to early in life, we should find a great decrease in the number of these useless citizens...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: "The Tramp, A Luxury." | 11/2/1904 | See Source »

Seating arrangements will be the same as on Monday. There will be, however, a larger force of ushers and it is expected that members of the University will find no difficulty in obtaining seats...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: "Study of Popular Governments." | 10/26/1904 | See Source »

Christ, said Bishop Carpenter, is a great personality in the world. In his life we find expressed the harmony between man and the unseen powers. He was more than an influential person; he was a great teacher of mankind. Some have said that we know nothing about Christ's principles, as we have no authoritative record of what he said. But eminent critics maintain that we have plenty of ground for believing that the gospels contain the essential principles of Christ's teaching...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Third Noble Lecture. | 10/15/1904 | See Source »

...revivify Christian doctrines and dogmas, we should lay them beside the principles of Christ. Then can we find the truth which the dogma was formed to preserve. Among his principles we find that of inwardness. To the Jews, the "kingdom of God" was a material kingdom which was to come. Christ, however, taught that the Kingdom of God was here, open to all who sought for it. Anyone who aids those in need finds the Kingdom of God an inward kingdom within men's hearts...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Third Noble Lecture. | 10/15/1904 | See Source »

...matter is of exceptional interest. A more straight-forward, sensible and well-written article than "The Crew Coach" by W. H. L. Bell '04, is seldom if ever seen in an undergraduate publication. His view may not be the correct one but the manner in which he writes will find it many supporters; and it is well worth reading. Of the other contributions, "The Skipper of Halibut Bay," a story by C. H. Brown '05, and "The Greater Birth," a poem by H. Hagedorn, Jr., '07, are of unusual excellence, but require such exceptional quality to give them preeminence over...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The New Monthly. | 9/29/1904 | See Source »

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