Word: blame
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...average Union member, imbued with that mystic something known as Harvard indifference, is doubtless largely responsible for this condition. But some blame may be laid elsewhere. Laxities in management, ever-absent bellboys, and somnolent waiters, all contribute. Most of all, the Union should be run by those whose interests lie there and not elsewhere, by men who use the building with some frequency. Its offices should not become rewards for all sorts of extra-curriculum activities. The CRIMSON calls to mind a recent election in which a man not even a member of the Union was nominated...
...those who put them in office, but earnestly through a genuine desire to make the Union live up to the ideals for which Mr. Higginson created it. They should be genuine servants. With the opportunity to make additional nominations by petition, the Union members have only themselves to blame if the final slate does not satisfy them. The right sort of spirit, if the Union is ever to attain it, must begin with the officers...
...Contemporain." The combination of an important topic of the French theatres and an interpreter of high critical standards who is thoroughly familiar with his subject should change indifference to interest. It may or may not be our fault that we show little curiosity in "Nietzsche"; we are certainly to blame if we miss hearing of an art that touches a great part of the French people, and is universal in its influence...
...strike hard and strike first was followed. Anyone who has heard the story of refugees from the war districts will not care to discuss the result. Can Mr. Schenck consistently make the suggestion that to the nation which most explicitly followed the advice of its military men most blame...
Under this system, the members of classes must blame themselves only, if the men chosen to fill the various places are not representative and capable...