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

...only will the trader gain the broad intellectual outlook that only life abroad can give, but he will acquire a knowledge which may some day culminate in the founding of a successful domestic industry. He will be able to given the nation an international point of view, the lack of which has recently given us so much difficulty, he will be able to make his mind go across the seas and consider the policies of those whom he has actually seen and whom he knows, and he will give cause for the further growth of Harvard's democratic ideals among...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: HARVARD AND FOREIGN TRADE | 11/8/1916 | See Source »

...have not space here to repeat my views as to the weakness of his case against the President, especially in regard to the Lusitania outrage and the Mexican turmoil, which have already been stated in a letter to the New York Times, November 5; all that I can point out hre is that in the very tone and method of his campaign, Mr. Hughes has utterly failed to exhibit those qualities of mind and heart which seem to me most needed in the present day spokeman of the American people...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Hughes Not Great Leader? | 11/6/1916 | See Source »

...Whittlesey, in his reply to my article of October 27, suggested "that its effectiveness depends largely on overlooking phases of those topics which it touches." If so, let me point out some of the phases overlooked even by Mr. Whittlesey. First, we have that recent and remarkable statement by Mr. Hughes to this effect: "My conception of the Presidency differs absolutely from that of Mr. Wilson. I look upon the President as the administrative head of the government. He looks upon the President as primarily the political leader and lawmaker of the nation." And they say Mr. Hughes means what...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Rule of Standpat Guard Near? | 11/6/1916 | See Source »

...Harvard University a new series to be called the "Harvard Theological Studies," of which the first is printed as an extra number of the Harvard Theological Review, the whole series to be edited by George F. Moore, Kirsop Lake and James H. Ropes for the Faculty of Divinity. The point of interest concerning the series is that it revealed by its prospectus. As a result of the war, many European journals of research have been forced to suspend publication, and in further consequence the editors of the Harvard Theological Review, seeking material for their issues, have had much valuable matter...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: United States as Scholars' Clearing House | 11/6/1916 | See Source »

...period the University contented itself with trying a few rushes and then punting, and the Southerners did the same. At the beginning of the next period, however, Minot ran back one of Thurman's punts from his own 40 to the visitors 30-yard line, from which point Bond kicked a goal after it had been found impossible to gain a first down by rushing. Virginia then received the ball on the kick-off but did not keep it long; for the University obtained it on its own 40-yard line, after Thurman had been forced to punt, and drove...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: VIRGINIA FAILED TO STOP COURSE OF UNIVERSITY'S SCORING MACHINE | 11/6/1916 | See Source »

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