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Word: typing (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1929
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Usage:

...question of Americanism. Personally, my Americanism is of such a kind that I prefer to think that these million citizens were not disloyal, were not friends of a felon, and followers of a mischief maker, but that they were friends of a fine old man and believers in a type of collectivism, which is not popular in this country, but towards which all the tendencies of modern political and industrial development seem to point...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Communication | 2/12/1921 | See Source »

Captain Carson, leaving his regular post at wing for the purpose of stiffening the Yale defense against the University attack, distinguished himself by his aggressive, acrobatic type of play. His work and that of Bulkley, center for the New Haven seven, was the sole redeeming feature of the contest. Both skaters were far above the average of their mates in speed and versatility...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: ELI HOCKEY SEPTET, POWERLESS BEFORE CRIMSON TEAM-WORK, OVERWHELMED 7-0 | 2/7/1921 | See Source »

...songs"? One graduate, when confronted with this question, after having bemoaned their death at the hands of the Glee Club, stammered out, "Johnny Harvard", and found himself at loss to go further. Needless to say, that song has now found a (watery) grave! As for other songs of that type, not distinctly pertaining to Harvard, such as "The Tavern in the Town", "Spanish Cavalier", and the like,--the Glee Club has no desire to cut short their deserved existence. It does not seem to be known that there is in the Club a committee of elected members, the function...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Glee Club's Policy | 2/5/1921 | See Source »

...Advocate by printing a series of articles, some of them rather objectional, intended to set the college-world both thinking and talking. Since those first two numbers it has been gradually declining into a more commonplace and normal state in which it is satisfied to print the usual type of college article and story. Its first number of the present year is sufficient proof that it had forgotten the purpose with which it set out. Such titles as "The Football Team," "Harvard's Glee Club," and an article on the band show clearly that the effort was rather toward replacing...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE HARVARD MAGAZINE | 2/1/1921 | See Source »

About $1200, raised by private subscription from graduate polo enthusiasts, in addition to the government allowance, would enable the purchase of an excellent string of ponies, not of the best possible type, but entirely satisfactory for a college team. This is what Yale has done...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: A HARVARD POLO TEAM? | 1/28/1921 | See Source »

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