Word: liii
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...this week, B.E.A.'s replies were rolling in, half of them in Latin. Said one, freely translated: "Most learned manager of sales: Nothing would be more welcome to me than to ... travel to Rome . . . But the LIII libras are lacking unto me. Farewell." Total response to date...
...able to travel to Rome nine times during his life* demonstrates clearly the miserable condition of our time, in which one moves about Europe with the utmost difficulty . . . But . . . B.E.A. truthfully promises to deliver your person at Rome in a mere seven hours . . . and all for the price of LIII libras...
Special topics: Public Opinion, XXII, p. 109, p. 440; XXIII, p. 268; Nation LV, 65; Yale Review, VI, pp. 75 6; Harpers Monthly, XCIV, pp. 483-4; Century, LIII...
General references: Senate Reports, 1889-90, No. 174, Views of the minority; Nation, XLVIII, 319 (April 18, 1889); LIII, 483 (Dec. 24, '91); LVII, 341 (Nov. '93); LVIII, 284 (April 19, '94); LX, 141 (Feb. 21, '95); Cong. Rec. '94-'95, p. 2256 (Feb. 15, '95); p. 2305 (Feb. 16, '95); A. B. Hart, "The Chilian Controversy," in Practical Essays on Am. Govt...
...This deprivation is an evil. Contemporary Review, LIII. p. 465 (Mar. 1888.) Forum, V. p. 517. Cable's Silent South, p. 16.- (a) For the South; bad moral influence of a violation of the Constitution. (b) For the North: disproportionate representation. (c) For the Negro: loss of the educating influence of citizenship...