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

...doing formation flying, and in a few days we are going to the front. Wish us luck. We are still only half-trained, for we have had no machine gun work, but I believe we are to be given some shooting at another school where we get the latest type of machines, each fellow...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: DESCRIBES FLYING IN FRANCE | 3/8/1918 | See Source »

There must still be undergraduates who not only read but think, and express their thoughts in simple, clear and forceful language. It cannot be that all the men who think have gone to the war, or, going, are treasuring their thoughts for slim posthumous volumes of the now familiar type. If things worth printing are still written in Cambridge, the Advocate editors still fail, after all the scolding they have been given of late, to lay eager hands upon the desirable manuscripts. With the Monthly eliminated, the Advocate ought to be able to get all of the best that Harvard...

Author: By F. SCHENCK ., | Title: Editorials of Current Advocate Timely, Sane, and Well Expressed | 2/25/1918 | See Source »

...need of a more general participation in athletics by undergraduates than resulted under the system in force throughout the first half of the college year, they have changed their attitude. The general opinion at the other two universities is now in favor of a renewal of the old type of competition on a less pretentious scale than formerly...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: COMMITTEE MAY ADOPT NEW ATHLETIC POLICY | 2/19/1918 | See Source »

...General Robertson illustrates the shortcomings of political interference. An efficient general staff is impossible where the carping politician is free to do as he will. On the other, the supporters of Lloyd George demand that he hold tight reins on the English war policy. Labor, pacifist and every type of dissenter find grounds for criticism. Whatever the case may be, the Anglo-Saxon trait of self-criticism and blundering correction of evils has placed the Allies in a very dangerous position...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: TROUBLE IN ENGLAND | 2/19/1918 | See Source »

...there is no sense in heaping coals of fire upon the heads of a demoralized nation. Russia is in a condition where internal reform is the one essential and where a real military resistance is impossible. We believe that by making peace she is throwing herself open to every type of Teuton trick and that Germany will exploit the Slavs solely for what can be drawn out of them. All of which is their hard luck and not ours...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE RUSSIAN PEACE | 2/12/1918 | See Source »

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