Word: accepter
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...think those who propose the new would do better if they were more candid. What they really are doing is asking us to give up many of our individual liberties in exchange for something which they call security. For myself, I accept the historical definition of liberty. Liberty means immunity from compulsion by the state. Patrick Henry said 'Give me liberty or give me death.' He did not say 'Give me economic security or give me death.' He did not say 'Give me forty dollars a month after I am 65 or give me death...
...Reader Capper and Goldfishman Noda consult the New York Aquarium, only institution in the U. S. which regularly procures fish for medical purposes. The Aquarium would be obliged to import bitterlings from Europe or Asia, storing them free of charge until the purchaser was ready to accept delivery. New York's Saw Mill River was stocked with bitterlings ten years ago, but two years later they had disappeared...
...Hoover is the second ex-President of the U. S. to become a director of New York Life. Calvin Coolidge faithfully attended directors' meetings from 1929 until his death. Director Hoover revealed last week that New York Life had urged him in 1933 to accept Mr. Coolidge's vacant chair, before they finally offered it to Dr. Angell. And everyone expected last week that the company would pay for Director Hoover's transportation across the continent to attend monthly meetings, as they had paid Director Coolidge's expenses when he went down from Northampton. Mr. Hoover...
...student group has been attempting to find a town outside of the city limits, which would allow the presentation of the play. As yet they have been unsuccessful and the nearest city which has stated that it would accept "Within the Gates" is Hartford, Conn. The city of Quincy, which housed "Strange Interlude" after the Boston censors had turned it out, refused to receive O'Casey's production...
...rich, pious, well-meaning, conservative and Premier. Before next autumn at the latest he must fight a Canadian election, and everyone has been saying he must lose for the same reason that Mr. Hoover inevitably lost: the people are sore. Last week Mr. Bennett decided that he would not accept defeat without trying the last refuge of statesmanship, demagoguery. Overnight the leader of Canada's Conservative Party turned such a complete somersault that the Conservative Montreal Gazette said he had "done violence to every Conservative principle." More friendly Canadian commentators gave the Premier credit for having ably aped President...