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Word: trespass (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...running through back-yards, across gardens, perhaps through flower beds, and of climbing fences in such a way as to break many of them down, is not only unethical, but illegal. For fifty or more men to make a public high-way of a private yard is a trespass against the rights of the owner. The average back fence, too, is not built with a view to resist the pell mell onslaught of such a mass. Yesterday's course, which went through a score of yards, resulted in some destruction of property and probably aroused considerable ill-feeling against...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Hare and Hound Runs. | 11/9/1895 | See Source »

...Harvard graduate and former occasional contributor to the CRIMSON, I trust that I may be permitted to trespass upon your space in behalf of a project that I feel a double interest in, both as a Harvard man and as a Greek...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: INTERNATIONAL SPORTS. | 3/5/1895 | See Source »

...Prohibition is a legitimate remedy. - (a) It is constitutional: Decisions of the Supreme Court, 101 U. S. 819, Cyclopedia of Temperance and Prohibition, p. 473, (b) No unusual trespass on personal liberty is involved: North Am. Review...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: English VI. | 12/19/1892 | See Source »

...trespass upon your space to-day merely because I am unwilling that the "Graduate," who was so violently attacked yesterday, should think that the undergraduates as a body have any sympathy with such an effision as appeared yesterday...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Communications. | 11/9/1887 | See Source »

...once more trespass on your columns with a subject which, if old, is not yet exhausted; indeed the carelessness with which the question of the possibility of establishing the said club has been allowed to drop, and the rapidity with which curiosity as regards it has evaporated would seem to prove the little interest in it, though there is, I think, deep interest below the surface of all the stumbling-blocks that impede its supporters. The most serious is, as I pointed out in a previous letter, the absence of any special reason strong enough to supply motive power...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The University Club. | 3/15/1887 | See Source »

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