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

Tomorrow's CRIMSON will be on sale at the news stands of the Grand Central and Pennsylvania stations, on trains between New York and Princeton, and at the news stand of the station at Princeton. The issue will contain special articles by Lawrence Perry of the New York Evening Post, Coach Dr. Paul Withington of the Freshman team, and Coach Knox, as well as the photographic supplement. Copies may be obtained at ten cents apiece...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Watch for Crimson in New York | 11/7/1919 | See Source »

...gain of the last few days is one principally to the efforts of about a dozen of the seventy teams that are operating in this locality. The totals as they new stand at the beginning of the sixth week are as follows: Boston. $3,622.494 New York, 3,281.808 Outside, 2,175.828 Total...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Boston Collected $50,000 Yesterday | 11/6/1919 | See Source »

...other way does the November Advocate show its rejuvenation more strikingly than in its editorials; tinged with a deliciously pungent humor, they stand a sturdy proof that Mother Advocate has abandoned her myopic spectacles of prejudice and reaction to gaze forth once more with the vision of the real Harvard. Prose and verse, fiction and discussion, all show, the same freshness, and are of almost equal merit...

Author: By John Cowles, | Title: "MOTHER ADVOCATE" BACK ON THE JOB FOR HARVARD | 11/5/1919 | See Source »

...strike is the motive for two articles. The first, "Pan and the Populace," by Mr. Fuller, is a readable account of the author's experiences on volunteer patrol duty. Mr. Garrison's "A Plan for the Police," a sound and fair-minded discussion of the police problem, typifies the stand that the re-born Advocate has taken for enlightened liberalism...

Author: By John Cowles, | Title: "MOTHER ADVOCATE" BACK ON THE JOB FOR HARVARD | 11/5/1919 | See Source »

...Camp Devens during the war, instilled a spirit into the gathering such as has not been seen at Harvard since the fall of 1916. Time and again the room rang to the tunes of "Harvardiana" and "The Gridiron King" until the leader was satisfied and Trumbull took the stand...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: SUPPORT GIVEN TEAM DECLARED DISGRACEFUL | 10/31/1919 | See Source »

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