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

...Chenoweth. In addition, Assistant Professor Chafee will help Professor Wambaugh with his course on Insurance--Marine, Fire, and Life, and Professor Kales will share the course on Property with Professor Joseph Warren. The following courses, which were omitted this year, will be given in 1916-17: Quasi-Contracts, Patent Law, and New York Practice. It has not yet been decided who will take the course on Evidence, given last year by Dean Thayer...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: MANY CHANGES SHOWN IN NEW LAW SCHOOL CATALOG | 5/13/1916 | See Source »

...result of yesterday's straw vote on the presidential candidates has an element of the surprising in it. It was generally expected that Roosevelt would lead the Republican candidates, but it was not so patent that he would receive more votes than President Wilson. The large Roosevelt vote may be to some extent due to the advertising done by his supporters; or it may be due to the sympathy of the Atlantic seaboard with Roosevelt's views on military preparedness, and thus unrepresentative of the country at large...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: HARVARD FOR ROOSEVELT? | 5/3/1916 | See Source »

...Sanger, Jr., '16, contributes perhaps the most distinguished poem, "To a Young Girl." Mr. Putnam '18, with "Storm," and Mr. Cutler '16, with a translation from Catullus, add good things to the number. In spite of an imitative and derivative air about most of these productions, patent confessions of the amateur's willingness of spirit and lack of skill, there is much promise and considerable present fulfilment. It is somewhat surprising not to find the poets rhyming about matters more pressing than the woods in Aiken, S. C., or a cavalier's song, with the Great War so near...

Author: By A. P. Mcmahon, | Title: Advocate Pleasant and Interesting | 12/10/1915 | See Source »

...means, also, that he should do so. In the past, democracy meant the opportunity of every man to put forth his utmost effort. Now, in politics we need you more than we ever needed those before. What we need is not a larger number of itinerant vendors of patent remedies. What we need is men who will make a scientific diagnosis of the disease from which the public suffers. We want to have men who will think out the questions which we shall encounter,--who will think them out scientifically and earnestly,--who will face them fearlessly, because, remember this...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: A WORLD OF OPPORTUNITY | 6/16/1913 | See Source »

...Medicine will be given by Dr. David L. Edsall at the Medical School. Longwood avenue, Boston, tomorrow afternoon. The lecture will begin at 4 o'clock, and the doors will be closed at 5 minutes past the hour. Dr. Edsall's subject will be the "Dangerous Effects of Patent Medicines...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Medical School Lecture Tomorrow | 2/15/1913 | See Source »

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