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"parenthetically" Definitions
  1. as extra information in a speech or piece of writing

73 Sentences With "parenthetically"

How to use parenthetically in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "parenthetically" and check conjugation/comparative form for "parenthetically". Mastering all the usages of "parenthetically" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Parenthetically, this speaks to the issues of technology within our society.
Parenthetically, the idea that "Social Security is bankrupt" is a complete non-sequitur.
Parenthetically, it is easy to share the president's disappointment in Attorney General Jeff Sessions.
But its most dangerous competitor may be the service Pinterest mentioned parenthetically alongside Facebook: Instagram.
The writers note, parenthetically, that the same fate has been suffered by diplomatic and military history.
Parenthetically, this is another smart move by the defense: asking for a "stay" instead of an outright dismissal.
But on the other hand, Jim, I'll just add this parenthetically, the President is defending the American economy.
Her conviction, for leaking classified military and diplomatic documents to WikiLeaks, was mentioned at the end, almost parenthetically.
And, perhaps parenthetically, it may also be the only way for the government to get the information it needs.
When talking about the importance of encouraging her children to chase their dreams, she adds "my boy and my girl," maybe parenthetically.
" The message went on to note parenthetically that both Putin and Lavrov had had to "personally approve the delegation's travel to this event.
"On a cultural level, Rowling can be commended for steering young fans away from the so-called dark side," the review adds parenthetically.
Parenthetically, I recently argued in a column that criminals who post videos of their crimes online should be subject to additional crimes or penalties.
Parenthetically, I should mention that the latest jobs report, issued after the September 21 meeting, offers only a few glimpses of increasing wage growth.
As Altuve has risen to the ranks of the majors' elite, we have written feature stories only parenthetically referencing that he is 5 feet 6 inches.
And when a last-minute revelation is slipped in, almost parenthetically, about Alison's past, you may feel that "Blue Ridge" hasn't played fair with its audience.
And the reason why I add that parenthetically, why I believe the fence is needed, does not have anything to do with immigration as much as drugs.
Parenthetically speaking, as a patient what is more important to you: the practice of high-quality medical care or the documentation, billing, and coding of medical care?
" Several paragraphs in, Stephen Marche states parenthetically, "How naïve must you be not to understand that sex itself is about power every bit as much as it's about pleasure?
We thought it was important to comment on some of this stuff under the umbrella of being the first society, and mistakes they made, and that parenthetically we were still making sometimes.
In addition to that, President Trump, who I might add, parenthetically -- he just said this yesterday in one of our meetings -- he believes Xi wants to deal and he wants to deal. Okay?
There is the anti-Jewish rage that reaches peaks rarely seen in modern literature and that demonstrates, parenthetically, that the United States is less immune than it thinks to this strain of madness.
The name of the man being tempted is … Well, if you've paid attention from the beginning, you'll know it's that same public servant who appeared to us — fleetingly, parenthetically — in the very first scene.
This mighty, anecdotal travelogue mirrors the majestic river itself, sometimes meandering like the Hudson's headwaters, diverted occasionally by jetsam (do we need to know, parenthetically, the year that so many players were born and died?).
Male partners — and even more so female or gender-nonconforming partners — have largely been written out of the pregnancy loss stories that we do know of culturally, or are "written in" as an appendage or, worse, parenthetically.
Parenthetically, with the recent report from a Pennsylvania grand jury detailing the scope of sexual crimes committed against more than 1,000 children by some 300 "predator priests" over seven decades the same can be asked of the church.
Parenthetically, I have had a security clearance for communications intelligence since 1980, Kara, and I've never, I don't believe, I Googled this to death, but I never witnessed one case in my lifetime of an American being jailed, harassed, outed, or humiliated in some way, extorted or anything by the government on the basis of their surveillance.
"If they can make this seem like the Virginia governor's case, that was McDonnell, that he's just doing what we want a responsible politician to do, he's creating opportunities for a friend – who parenthetically is not a constituent – that he's being responsive, he's opening a door, he's providing opportunities, that can help," explained Mala Ahuja Harker, a former federal prosecutor, in New Jersey.
The only story on the WaPo site for Baird mentions him parenthetically in a story about Jeff BezosJeffrey (Jeff) Preston BezosPortraits of Lin-Manuel Miranda, Jeff Bezos headed for National Portrait Gallery Hillicon Valley: Zuckerberg courts critics on Capitol Hill | Amazon makes climate pledge | Senate panel approves 0M for state election security News outlets choose their darlings, ignore others' voices MORE donating to a super PAC to elect military veterans.
Nearly all of the major figures who enabled this integration through reidentification, who went down like Moses into the rail yards, packing plants, and sweatshops, and brought socialism to America, were Jews: Daniel De Leon (1852-1914), a Sephardic immigrant from Curaçao and the forefather of industrial unionism, became the leader of the Socialist Labor Party of America and a three-time failed candidate for governor of New York; Samuel Gompers (1003-1924), an immigrant Jew from England who was the first president of the American Federation of Labor; Victor L. Berger (1860-1929), an immigrant Jew from Austro-Hungary, who founded the Social Democratic Party of America, converted Eugene V. Debs, who had been a Democratic member of the Indiana General Assembly, to socialism, and became the first socialist elected to the House; Morris Hillquit (1869-1933), a Jewish immigrant from the Baltics, who co-founded the Socialist Party of America and was a two-time failed candidate for the mayor of New York City and representative of New York's 9th congressional district—Sanders's birth district; and Saul Alinsky, the Chicago-born codifier of community organizing, who influenced Sanders's grassroots-collectivization campaigning (and, parenthetically, served as the subject of Hillary Clinton's undergrad thesis).
Parenthetically, the group included a whole group of Boy Scouts.
All music by Leonard Bernstein and lyrics by Stephen Sondheim. Vocal performers listed parenthetically after song title.
As noted above, temperature and wavelength are frequently reported as a superscript and subscript, respectively, while the solvent is reported parenthetically, or omitted if it happens to be water.
Parenthetically, this line treatment suggests an attempt to mimic the agnathous head, if we suppose that the jaw area was colored suitably dark in contrast to the face proper.
The two fullest accounts, those of Irenaeus and Epiphanius, add by way of appendix another particular of the antecedent mythology; a short notice on the same subject being likewise inserted parenthetically by Hippolytus.Hippolytus, Philosophumena vii. 26, p. 240: cf.
S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Wisconsin #U.S. Attorney for the Western District of Wisconsin #U.S. Attorney for the District of Wyoming Note: Except as indicated parenthetically, the foregoing links are to the corresponding district court, rather than to the U.S. Attorney's Office.
In 2015, it was named one of the ten leading examples of sustainable architecture by travel website When on Earth. Parenthetically, 50 years ago the Heineken company looked into changing their bottles so that they could be used as building blocks, a construction material. While nothing came of that, the monks found a way.
History of Wales. Reference to the inscription stone is made on page 40. He states on page 89 that Welsh society kept its native structure and connections to its past. Wendy Davies in her Wales in the Early Middle Ages (1982) mentions the Cantiorix inscription parenthetically as part of a comment on people and communities.
There are many notable people who share the Reed surname. These people are listed below to provide a partial geographical and time reference for use of this name. People listed below are presumed to be white unless otherwise indicated parenthetically; this information is included as ethnicity is an important parameter in name studies. Ethnicities found below include African American and Jewish.
William Bishop is head of this organization."Special, "Court Decision May Bar British Planes From U. S.", Chicago Daily Tribune, Saturday 10 July 1920, Volume LXXIX, Number 165, page 1. In the 14 March 1921 issue of Aviation and Aircraft Journal, the Lawrence Sperry Aircraft Company, Inc. advertised that they were now the dealers for Avro aircraft, parenthetically noting "formerly sold by the Interallied Aircraft Corp.
The issue of ambiguity is the main hurdle in any effort to "cleanse" the Korean language of Chinese characters. Characters convey meaning visually, while alphabets convey guidance to pronunciation, which in turn hints at meaning. As an example, in Korean dictionaries, the phonetic entry for gisa yields more than 30 different entries. In the past, this ambiguity had been efficiently resolved by parenthetically displaying the associated hanja.
Pete Jupp is a British drummer/musician who played in the bands The English Rogues, Wildlife (with Steve Overland), and Samson (with Merv Goldsworthy), before forming FM in 1984 with the (parenthetically) aforementioned musicians. FM disbanded in 1995 but reformed in 2007 to headline Firefest IV at Nottingham Rock City and together with keyboardist Jem Davis and guitarist Jim Kirkpatrick released the album Metropolis in March 2010.
If the author's name is used in the text, only the date of publication need be cited parenthetically (with or without the page number). Research done by Smith found that students do not always cite their work properly (2016). In- text citations are usually placed just inside a mark of punctuation. An exception to this rule is for block quotations, where the citation is placed outside the punctuation.
Canadian guidelines discuss this lack of clarity and parenthetically point out that "heavy alcohol use" is defined by the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism as five or more drinks per episode on five or more days during a 30-day period.U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. (2000). National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism. Tenth special report to the U.S Congress on alcohol and health: Highlights frfom current research.
Aži Dahāka is the most significant and long-lasting of the ažis of the Avesta, the earliest religious texts of Zoroastrianism. He is described as a monster with three mouths, six eyes, and three heads, cunning, strong, and demonic. In other respects Aži Dahāka has human qualities, and is never a mere animal. Aži Dahāka appears in several of the Avestan myths and is mentioned parenthetically in many more places in Zoroastrian literature.
Using author-date style, the sourced text is indicated parenthetically with the last name(s) of the author(s) and the year of publication with no intervening punctuation. Research has found that students do not always cite their work properly (Smith 2016). When page numbers are used, they are placed along with the author's last name and date of publication after an interposed comma. Research has found that students do not always cite their work properly (Smith 2016, 24).
Graduate degrees should require two years of full-time study. # The word “Planning” or the French equivalent must appear in the title of the degree or parenthetically to define the discipline. # The program offering the degree shall be a recognized administrative unit within the university, in the direct charge of an individual whose primary area of activity is planning and a department chair or similar. # The administrative unit must have appropriate administrative capacity and academic independence.
The taxonomy of the camas pocket gopher and its genus, Thomomys, have a convoluted history. According to a review article published by the American Society of Mammalogists in 1987, Johann Friedrich von Brandt was the first to refer to the camas pocket gopher as Thomomys bulbivorus in an 1855 article published by the Imperial Academy of Sciences. In the 1855 article, Brandt refers to Tomomys bulbivora without the "h" and ending with an "a". He writes parenthetically "(man schreibe nicht Thomomys)".
Eddie turns to Richie and states "Although we—and indeed the whole BBC—respect people's rights to believe in whatever they wish…"; at this point he turns to the camera and breaks the fourth wall of theatre and parenthetically adds, "Because we don't want to get into the shit on this one."; turning back to Richie he finishes with "We don't actually believe in God." Richie realises Eddie's right, and the two exclaim "Shit!" as the hand disappears and the two plummet.
Hebrews is a very consciously "literary" document. The purity of its Greek was noted by Clement of Alexandria, according to Eusebius (Historia Eccl., VI, xiv), and Origen of Alexandria asserted that every competent judge must recognize a great difference between this epistle and those of Paul (Eusebius, VI, xxv). This letter consists of two strands: an expositional or doctrinal strand, and a hortatory or strongly urgingalso translated "exhorting" strand which punctuates the exposition parenthetically at key points as warnings to the readers.
Following the defeat of the Ottoman Empire in the First World War, the Ottoman army was disarmed according to the Armistice of Mudros. Although the Ottoman Empire had to agree to give up vast areas including most of Middle East, the Allies further retained the power of controlling what was left of the Ottoman Empire, namely Turkey. It soon became clear that the Allies were planning to allocate parts of Turkey to Armenia and Greece. Parenthetically, southern Anatolia was put under French and Italian mandate.
Since the Byzantines believed that the Rus' had been converted in the 9th century, they treated them as a Christian nation and failed to record the second Christianization of the country under Vladimir in 988. (Parenthetically, no foreign source, barring Yahya of Antioch (died ca. 1066), mentions Vladimir's conversion in the 980s.) In the inventory of Orthodox bishoprics compiled under Leo VI (reigned 886 to 912), the see of Rus' ranks sixty-first. In the list compiled during Constantine VII's reign (913-959), the see of Rus' holds the 60th position.
Ananke is a prominent figure in all the books of Kelly McCullough's Ravirn series, under the name "Necessity." In Kieron Gillen and Jamie McKelvie's comic book series The Wicked + The Divine, Ananke is the immortal caretaker of the Gods of The Recurrence. In the manga and anime Mobile Suit Gundam, the flagship of the Earth Federation armada at the Battle of Loum is named Ananke. The choice of the ship as flagship is parenthetically noted by a character as an intimation of the overwhelming material superiority of the Federation.
The Disney film Darby O'Gill and the Little People (1959) which features a leprechaun king, is a work in which Fergus mac Léti was "featured parenthetically". It might be pointed out that in the film, the captured leprechaun king grants three wishes, like Fergus in the saga. While the film project was in development, Walt Disney was in contact with, and consulting Séamus Delargy and the Irish Folklore Commission, but never asked for leprechaun material, even though a large folkloric repository on such subject was housed by the commission.
The UNLU and Ghassan Andoni in Beit Sahour, urged people to stop paying taxes to Israel, which inherited and modified the previous Jordanian tax-collection regime in the West Bank.Local Government in the West Bank and Gaza (says parenthetically that the property tax "rate and base" were "unchanged since 1963") Baxendale, Sidney J. "Taxation of Income in Israel and the West Bank: A Comparative Study" Journal of Palestine Studies, Vol. 18, No. 3 (Spring, 1989), pp. 134–141 "it retained the Jordanian tax law" "No taxation without representation," said a statement from the organizers.
144) He acknowledged his indebtedness to two ornithologists who provided him with information for his essay on Our Feathered Songsters, but commented parenthetically "I only wish they would not use their little guns so much."(p. 145) He also remarked negatively on catching trout in freshwater streams ("they are more beautiful there than in our fish basket" Logging of coast redwoods was well underway in the later 1800s along the central and northern California coast. In his 1879 booklet Anderson wrote of his concerns: > REDWOOD FORESTS . . . Although the supply of timber is very great in the > mountains it cannot be considered inexhaustible.
Report of the Board of Trustees of the American Medical Association." Parenthetically, it is difficult to prove wrongdoing on behalf of a review committee that can use their clinical and administrative privileges to conceal exculpatory evidence. The California legislature framed its statutes so as to allow that a peer review can be found in court to have been improper due to bad faith or malice, in which case the peer reviewers' immunities from civil liability "fall by the wayside". California law allows "aggrieved physicians the opportunity to prove that the peer review to which they were subject was in fact carried out for improper purposes, i.e.
You're a person from the street and speak of your experiences. Then at the end you can tell them God has helped me out like this and it might transfer over instead of just come straight out and just speak straight out of religion." In an October 2010 article for The Guardian, Jon Ronson characterized the Insane Clown Posse as "evangelical Christians" who have "only been pretending to be brutal and sadistic to trick their fans into believing in God." In an interview with ICP conducted for the article, two of Ronson's queries referred parenthetically to ICP's "Christian message" and to the members' identities as "[secret] Christians.
Together they produce a few effects. Parenthetically, we should not count acquisitive impulses and other physiological effects among serious cultural shifts: they are better classified as curable diseases of mass media consumers; the cure lies in turning off the TV for a few days. Valid modern developments include these: heightened interest in religion as the bearer of more solid moral values (people need an anchor, after all); heightened interest in health and activity in the adulthood and old age (valeology); heightened interest in games and winning (game-ology?); heightened interest in world culture, its logic and typology (culture studies). Rozhdestvensky calls the former three “stylistic interests”.
Four contemporary critics praise Oxford as a poet and a playwright, three of them within his lifetime: # William Webbe's Discourse of English Poetrie (1586) surveys and criticises the early Elizabethan poets and their works. He parenthetically mentions those of Elizabeth's court, and names Oxford as "the most excellent" among them. # The Arte of English Poesie (1589), attributed to George Puttenham, includes Oxford on a list of courtier poets and prints some of his verses as exemplars of "his excellencie and wit." He also praises Oxford and Richard Edwardes as playwrights, saying that they "deserve the hyest price" for the works of "Comedy and Enterlude" that he has seen.
Lady Nicholas Windsor was born as Paola Louise Marica Doimi de Lupis. She used this name as an undergraduate at Cambridge in 1989;Cambridge University List of Members Up to 31 December 1988, Cambridge University Press, 1989, pg 345 by 1993 her entry includes the added 'Frankopan Šubić', while parenthetically including her original name for clarification.Cambridge University List of Members Up to 31 December 1991, Cambridge University Press, 1993, pg 28 By the time of her marriage she was known as Princess Paola Doimi de Lupis Frankopan Šubić Zrinski. Her father is Louis Doimi de Lupis, who claimed to be a member of the Frankopan family.
Article 30, section 1 provides that the law and subsequent changes thereof are to be carried out by the National People's Congress and signed into force by the President of the People's Republic of China—parenthetically, 'Head of State', probably to infer the possibility of a different position once the law takes effect; section 2 provides that permanent sections of the law cannot be changed unless later agreements contain promises that are 'more favourable' (更加优惠, but the beneficiary is unspecified); section 3 states that the law is lower than the Constitution of the People's Republic of China but higher than any other laws of the land.
On the other hand, Constantine Zuckerman argues that, in response to the initial request of the Rus', Photius (and Michael III) sent to the Rus' Khaganate a simple bishop. The pagans felt slighted at the low rank of the prelate and their Christian zeal evaporated. In September 867, Michael was assassinated by Basil, who (together with a new patriarch, Ignatius) sent to the Rus' an archbishop who propped up the religious fervor of the local leaders with rich presents. Parenthetically, the contemporaneous Christianization of Bulgaria was likewise effected in two stages: the Bulgars were offended when a simple bishop arrived to their capital from Constantinople and requested Pope Nicholas I to send them a higher-ranking church official.
The higher level comprises a small number of large compartments (biomes), and the lower level comprises a large number of smaller compartments (provinces), each designated with a unique four-letter code. An initial proof-of-concept for the Ecological Geography of the Sea was demonstrated by estimating global primary production using satellite radiometer data partitioned into biogeochemical domains and provinces. This influential work was published in 1995 with co-authors Shubha Sathyendranath, Trevor Platt, and Carla Caverhill, and stands as the most highly cited paper in the Journal of Plankton Research. Parenthetically, the first paper in the first issue of the first volume of this journal which appeared in 1979 was also authored by Longhurst.
A risk premium can also be attached to the hurdle rate if management feels that specific opportunities inherently contain more risk than others that could be pursued with the same resources. A common method for evaluating a hurdle rate is to apply the discounted cash flow method to the project, which is used in net present value models. The hurdle rate determines how rapidly the value of the dollar decreases out in time, which, parenthetically, is a significant factor in determining the payback period for the capital project when discounting forecast savings and spending back to present-day terms. Most companies use a 12% hurdle rate, which is based on the fact that the S&P; 500 typically yields returns somewhere between 8% and 11% (annualized).
Thematically the poem is one of Coleridge's most cohesive constructs, with the narrative plot more explicit than previous works such as the fragmented Kubla Khan which tend to transcend traditional composure. Indeed, in many respects the consistency of the poem – most apparent from the structural formality and rhythmic rigidity (four accentual beats to every line), when regarded alongside the unyielding mysticism of the account – creates the greatest juxtaposition in the poem. Parenthetically, Coleridge described such mysticism and vagueness in his notes to The Rime of The Ancient Mariner as "mesmeric" in an attempt to justify his unconventional ideas as being profound in their stark originality. While some modern critics focus upon lesbian and feminist readings of the poem, another interesting interpretation is the one that explores the demonic presence that underscores much of the action.
Machinery's Handbook refers parenthetically to these fasteners as "Finished Hex Bolts".. Reasonably, these fasteners might be referred to as bolts, but based on the US government document Distinguishing Bolts from Screws, the US government might classify them as screws because of the tighter tolerance. In 1991 responding to an influx of counterfeit fasteners Congress passed PL 101-592 "Fastener Quality Act" This resulted in the rewriting of specifications by the ASME B18 committee. B18.2.1B18.2.1 - 1996 Square and Hex Bolts and Screws, Inch Series - Print-Book was re-written and as a result they eliminated the "Finished Hex Bolts" and renamed them the "Hex Cap Screw"—a term that had existed in common usage long before, but was now also being codified as an official name for the ASME B18 standard.
Gotham: A History of New York City to 1898, winner of the 1999 Pulitzer Prize for History, also parenthetically claims Bronck as a Dane. A 1908 publication portrays Bronck as a Mennonite who fled the Netherlands to Denmark because of religious persecution. In a 1977 pamphlet commemorating the founding of the borough a publication of the Bronx County Bar Association states that it "is widely accepted that Bronck came from Denmark, but claims have also been made by the Frisian Islands on the North Sea coast and by a small town in Germany". In 1981 the Manx-Svenska Publishing Co. released a now out-of-print 19-page pamphlet, The Founder of the Bronx, authored G.V.C. Young O.B.E., after he had conducted research in the Netherlands, Sweden, and New York.
The idea of a purely immaterial existence was so foreign to Egyptian thought that when Christianity spread in Egypt, they borrowed the Greek word psychē to describe the concept of soul instead of the term bꜣ. Žabkar concludes that so particular was the concept of the bꜣ to ancient Egyptian thought that it ought not to be translated but instead the concept be footnoted or parenthetically explained as one of the modes of existence for a person. In another mode of existence the bꜣ of the deceased is depicted in the Book of the Dead returning to the mummy and participating in life outside the tomb in non-corporeal form, echoing the solar theology of Ra uniting with Osiris each night.Oxford Guide: The Essential Guide to Egyptian Mythology, James P. Allen, p.
Having laid out the general shape and conduits of the mind, Freud goes on to elucidate the forces that act within that structure—namely, the love instinct and the death instinct. The former is the tendency to create; the latter, the tendency to destroy. He props up his argument for these forces by appealing to cosmology and by implicitly invoking ideas of entropy and Newton's third law of motion (that of equal and opposite forces): “the task of [the death instinct] is to lead organic matter back to the inorganic state; on the other hand... Eros aims at more far-reaching coalescence of the particles into which living matter has been dispersed” (56). Besides this purely aesthetic reasoning, Freud gives no further argument for the existence of these two opposing instincts—save to (parenthetically) mention "anabolism and katabolism" (56), the cellular processes of building up and breaking down molecules.
Club cells were previously called Clara cells, as they were first described by Max Clara (1899–1966), in 1937. Clara was an active member of the Nazi Party and used tissue taken from executed victims of the Third Reich for his research—including the work that led to his discovery of Clara cells. In May 2012, the editorial boards of most of the major respiratory journals (including the journals of the American Thoracic Society, the European Respiratory Society and the American College of Chest Physicians) concluded that the continued use of Clara's eponym would be equivalent to honoring him; they therefore introduced a name-change policy, which went into effect beginning January 1, 2013. The term "Clara" was used parenthetically after "club cell" for a 2-year period, after which "Clara cell" and "Clara cell secretory protein" were conclusively replaced with "club cell" and "club cell secretory protein", respectively.
Neither man wanted the blame for causing the impending war. Cavour noted that Napoleon began by stating that he was determined to support Piedmont-Sardinia with all his strength in a war against Austria, on the condition that the war was not in support of a revolutionary causeIn his report of the meeting to his king Cavour entered parenthetically "(?!)" when reporting Napoleon's rejection of support for a "revolutionary cause". and could be justified in diplomatic terms and, more importantly, before public opinion in France and in Europe.«...risoluto a sostenere la Sardegna con tutte le sue forze in una guerra contro l’Austria, a patto che la guerra avvenisse per una causa non rivoluzionaria e potesse trovare giustificazione dinanzi alla diplomazia e più ancora all’opinione pubblica di Francia e d’Europa» Violations of trade treaty obligations by Austria were considered by Napoleon to be insufficient grounds for a war.
The unfinished edifice lay vacant for roughly a decade until Franklin's nascent Academy of Philadelphia was looking for space to begin operations and purchased the still unused building in 1750. The Academy of Philadelphia operated a charity school for a few years and this brief period was the basis for the trustees' claims of institutional continuity to the earlier date, as the Academy had assumed the trust of the charity school for local orphans planned but not begun by the original fundraisers of the building. Parenthetically, the University of Pennsylvania calls itself the fourth oldest institution of higher learning in the United States, comparing the legal charter dates of Princeton University (1746) and Columbia University (1754) with the 1740 date in which the trust had been established and fundraising had begun for the building it would ultimately purchase in 1750. Perhaps not surprisingly, Princeton University and Columbia University do not follow the same train of thought in their own institutional histories.

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