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

...United States today is merely this: shall we try to work back towards perfect competition, or shall we accept the other alternative and regulate competition and confront the problem of fixing prices for all the most important commodities in the same manner as railroad rates, gas rates, and the like...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: LAWS, POLICIES AND ETHICS | 2/18/1911 | See Source »

...unified by a definite ideal of social progress firmly based on a pervasive sense of reality; above all, jubilantly young. At times the Monthly has seemed to stumble in premature senility; in this number it is light afoot, and fine with the virtues and the faults that we all like to claim as belonging essentially to youth...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Live Articles in February Monthly | 2/16/1911 | See Source »

...disadvantage inasmuch as they are ignorant of the means of forcing up the market-price by organization, strikes, etc., or are unable to carry them to success. The main leader then is sentimental, as the rebuttal points out, but there is behind the sentimentality the temper that is like to lead to the juster common-sense of the coming generations. Kindred in spirit to these articles are two translations, one of a Spanish sonnet, another of an address by Anatole France to French students. This address is a plea for vision--"Agitate and dream; and above all, oh, above...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Live Articles in February Monthly | 2/16/1911 | See Source »

Though it is true that the week-day Chapel services are poorly attended, it often happens that the attendance on Sunday crowds Appleton Chapel. Indeed, this is generally the case when men like tomorrow's preacher, Dr. Lyman' Abbott, officiate. There is a rule that no seats except in the galleries are open to the public. Despite this regulation, it is not unusual to find a large number of people, mostly women, unconnected with the University, occupying seats on the floor of the Chapel. Many students, in consequence, are forced to stand in the rear. It is obvious that these...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: SUNDAY CHAPEL. | 2/11/1911 | See Source »

...Without stopping to criticize" the culture of "A Senior" as displayed in Saturday's CRIMSON, I should like to "ask the question frankly": is it not surprising that "A Senior," presumably having moved among us now for three years, should believe that he could pick his courses solely by consulting the University Catalogue? The undergraduate has additional means of becoming "informed beforehand concerning the nature of his courses": he may look over previous examination papers, he may talk with men who have taken the course in former years, and, in the case of English 2, he may attend the first...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: English 2. | 2/6/1911 | See Source »

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