Word: traffice
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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Princeton, upholding the affirmative, based its argument on constitutional and sociological grounds. Albet A. Snyder cited Justice Marshall's noted verdict in Gibbons vs. Ogden: "Commerce is more than traffic, it represents all varieties of trade and intercourse...
...many years before work began in the spring of 1903, demand had been growing for a new stadium. Sensitive souls were offended by what they called "a forest of columns supporting a rambling and irregular structure," and felt, with the increase of traffic in the Soldiers Field area, that the former grandstands were a poor advertisement for the University...
Overcrowding, operating expenses, and a coming survey of traffic in House dining halls have compelled the University to enforce suddenly a dead-letter regulation forbidding undergraduates to eat lunch at Harkness Commons...
There were some who questioned the idea of a traffic-free interior city. "Rome cannot live in the shadow of its ruins," sighed // Tempo. "Rome is not Pompeii, but a living metropolis...
...Deep in the interior, where airliners never go, when the children see an airplane, they call to their mothers: 'Look, mama, there goes President Juscelino!'" So far he has logged 6,000 flying hours in the air, prefers a helicopter to a car for getting around traffic-jammed...