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

...injuries at Princeton have probably not been so extensive as at Harvard, but they have nevertheless impeded the progress of the team considerably. Eberstadt, who played quarter in the early games and gave much promise for future development, has been laid up twice, and the result of the second injury was such that the doctors forbade him to play for the rest of the season. Bigler and McLean, two tackles of first-rate ability, have also been on the sick list, and while they are both back in the line-up now, their absence has been a severe handicap...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: STRONG LINE-UP FOR PRINCETON | 11/7/1914 | See Source »

...hand. Believing that all useful work is social service, even though we make our living by it, and that every serious student is preparing himself for some kind of useful work, this committee has no desire to attract the students' attention away from that kind of social service. Nevertheless, there are present opportunities for active and positive service which may be carried on by a student while he is preparing for future vocational service. To spend a few hours a week in the performance of these avocational forms of social service which are immediately productive will not hinder, but help...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: IMPORTANT SOCIAL SERVICE WORK | 11/4/1914 | See Source »

Encouraging indications were manifested in the Forum of last night. Although the European war was not brought to an end by the enthusiastic discussions, nevertheless, the Forum achieved success. There are, fortunately, a group of men in the University who are keenly following the economic and political affairs of the nations of the world, and who enjoy to discuss them openly in a sound manner. There must also be other men who are keenly following the march of events in other fields, and Forums of the future will welcome those who did not take part in the discussions last evening...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE FORUM. | 11/4/1914 | See Source »

...fiddle while Rome burned; Harvard plays football while civilization totters. Is it, after all, too Brisbanian an analogy? There were a thousand men at the football mass meeting last Thursday and yet no one expects that a fraction of that number will attend the discussion of the war tonight. Nevertheless, it should be a good meeting. Partisan animosities are now well under control and most people are aware of their own ignorance or lack of insight into the fundamentals of the conflict that finds half the civilized world in arms. Under such circumstances, there is everything to be gained...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE COLLEGE AND THE WAR. | 11/3/1914 | See Source »

...date of 1546 and the dragon crest signature of Lucas Cranach, but in all probability is a work of his school. Although it does not possess the quality of the finest paintings by Cranach, like the Portrait of a Lady, in the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, it nevertheless is an extremely interesting characterization of the great reformer, and it illustrates the general manner of Cranach, who was one of the greatest German painters of the 16th century. The other two pictures are Sienese works of the 15th century. One is a Madonna and Child, painted by Francesco...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: FAMOUS PAINTINGS EXHIBITED | 10/27/1914 | See Source »

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