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Word: without (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
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Usage:

Today is the last day for enlisting in the Harvard Regiment. Thus far only 700 men have signed the enlistment blanks, out of the 1200 who signed up at the first call; therefore, every member of the provisional battalion must enroll today without fall. Besides signing up, every member of the regiment should report at Weld 3 to be measured for his uniform. The price of the equipment is $6.00, payable on January 15, but anyone who feels he is unable to pay this should consult some member of the committee at Weld 3. No man should refrain from joining...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: 700 MEN ENLISTED TO DATE | 12/22/1915 | See Source »

...cent. of the children attend; but the percentage in the higher institutions is not as great as in America. Before the student goes to the university, he has several years of work which corresponds to the undergraduate work of this country. At the universities only the degree of M.A., without the intermediate one of A.B., is conferred...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: JAPANESE STUDENTS COMING TO THIS COUNTRY AFTER WAR | 12/20/1915 | See Source »

...Regiment crystallize in the mass meeting to be held in the Union this afternoon at 5 o'clock, instead of in the New Lecture Hall, as previously announced. Every man in the University who is interested in preparedness or in military training in American colleges and universities, with or without regard to the question of preparedness, is requested to be present...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: MILITARY MEETING IN UNION | 12/20/1915 | See Source »

...from trying to prevent the education of men without means, the University, with its host of stipend-bearing scholarships, makes the problem easier than anywhere else in America. Harvard, realizing that maximum influence and virility require universality, wishes to represent all strata and all sections. By no means is it the stronghold of a class. Unfortunately education presupposes standards, and these unpleasantly exclude many; there is the further need of charging tuition to defray about a fourth of a student's academic expenses. Some minds evidently are still so limited as to see class exclusion in these ineradicable necessities...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: "THE EDUCATIONAL OCTOPUS." | 12/20/1915 | See Source »

Preparedness by half-measures, Mr. Angell maintained, is more dangerous than total unpreparedness. To establish a great military and naval force without formulating a distinct foreign policy is a half-measure. The danger for this country is not that we shall have a force without an object. We have a very definite foreign policy, a policy which perhaps we have yet to show contains no menace towards other nations, but we are pitiably lacking in power to enforce...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: PREPAREDNESS AND ALLIANCES. | 12/18/1915 | See Source »

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