Word: blaming
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...public, this grudging was significant because the questions at issue in the St. Paul case were not questions of rates, rebates, wages, schedules, porter's uniforms or any other question about the actual operation of a railroad. The questions were: 1) The St. Paul having crashed, who was to blame? 2) In putting the St. Paul together again, how should it be done...
...considered, the outlook is sinister. Standards conducive to stabilization are all too few, and the average student in most cases has enough intelligence to regret the time, energy, and aspiration he loses in pursuing chimeras ineffectively and in obtaining indefinite results, Perhaps Professor Babbitt, in placing most of the blame upon the professor, is too lenient toward the student. For it is only by mutual cooperation that any definite goal can possibly be attained. If the undergraduate is not willing to free himself to a greater extent from the exacting demands of outside activities and devote himself to "the problem...
...permission to change the course. One and all, the Texas' officers pooh-poohed the young busybody, who dashed at last to Rear Admiral Victor Blue, the commandant. Admiral Blue sprang from bed, but too late. The Texas ran aground on Fire Island. In gentlemanly fashion, Admiral Blue took the blame...
...Lieut. Worden answered questions, the faces of his fellow Navy men relaxed. Slowly but steadily, any blame for the collision was shifted from the Paulding to the 8-4, though the latter's chief, the late Lieut. Commander Roy K. Jones, was described as an almost "overly cautious" officer...
...Dana had a writer on the Sun (was his name Cummings?) who was known as the great American condenser. Think TIME has several of them. When Grant was President there was much talk of corruption in Washington. Bclknap and Dent his brother-in-law were the chief ones to blame. The President said "Let no guilty man escape." Wouldn't it be fine if pur President would choose to say as much, instead of entertaining at breakfast such men as -, - and big -*? Oh, for Roosevelt at such a time! JAMES S. BELL Franklin...