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

...should be the establishment of a large number of well-appointed landing places along the important trade routes. The vast majority of flying accidents are caused by the lack of good landing places. If, for example, it could be made possible for a pilot flying from Boston to New York to be never out of gliding distance of a sufficiently large and even landing ground the danger of the flight would be practically eliminated...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: EXPENSE AND DANGER OF AIR RACES BETWEEN COLLEGES MAKES THEM UNDESIRABLE, SAYS GODFREY CABOT | 11/20/1919 | See Source »

...matters, and that it was not so informed seems unusual. The arguments for raising tennis to a University sport are several and to the point. There are some against it. Where the preponderance of fact lies is indicated by the fact that two former University tennis captains, the New York Times, the Boston Herald, and other important sources connected more immediately with the University have declared that tennis ought to be a major sport...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Raising the Status of Tennis. | 11/20/1919 | See Source »

...eight-line dispatch from New York brings the news that twenty vessels of the Navy's Suicide Squadron" have reached that port. For over two years they have spent their days and nights in foreign waters sweeping the seas of more than fifty thousand mines that the commerce of the world might pass in safety. This was the work that called for perhaps the sheerest courage of the war. Ploughing undramatically through the dangerous, fog-swept North Sea, constantly in danger of being wiped out by the deadly, unseen mine or the cowardly submarine, they made it possible...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE "SUICIDE SQUADRON." | 11/20/1919 | See Source »

...Bernard Sheridan Cogan of Stoneham, Joseph Morgan Cooper of Syracuse. N. Y.; Charles Kimball Cummings, Jr., of Boston; Louis De Jonge of Fitchburg, John Dempsey of Boston, Francis Fiske of Needham, Joseph Milton Hartley of Fairmount, West Va.; Alexander Haven Ladd, Jr., of Milton, Charles Carroll Lee of New York, N. Y.; George Owen, Jr., of Newton, Langdon Ward Post of Bayport, Long Island, N. Y.; Francis Rouillard of Chicope Falls, Edward Gillette Selden of Andover, Marion Wesley Self of Abilene, Texas; Walter keith Shaw of Concord, Duncan Forbes Thayer of Lancaster, Phillip Elder Wilson of Gloucester, Willis Brown Wood...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: 25 FRESHMEN WIN NUMERALS | 11/18/1919 | See Source »

John Kirkland Clark, a member of the New York law firm of Murray, Prentice and Clark, has been appointed Lecturer on New York Practice at the Law School for the current year. Mr. Clark was graduated from Yale in 1899, and took his degree sum laude in 1902 at the Law School, where he was an editor of the Law Review...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: SIX FACULTY APPOINTMENTS MADE | 11/18/1919 | See Source »

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