Word: either
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Speaking of the influence that the United States could exert toward maintaining world peace, Colonel Kilbourne said that every nation in the world knows that if we throw the weight of our resources on either side in any contest, the side we support will win. "The influence, and power of the United States, if tactfully used, could go a long way toward suppressing wars among the other nations...
...noxious petition accused the University of truckling to business interests to the detriment of its educational standards. The stigma of this accusation lingers. It is either true or untrue. That the legislature has not thought fit to interfere neither proves nor disproves the charges. But Harvard men--both graduates and undergraduates--can not rest upon this noncommittal result. The interests of the University demand that the Alumni assume responsibility for a thorough investigation by the proper authorities to establish the facts...
...James H. Collins, writing in the current issue of Printers' Ink says: "Fundamentally, the trust company must be either wrong or right. If it is right, and a good thing for the public, the more it advertises and the greater the volume of business it receives, the greater the public good. If the trust company is wrong, why merely prohibit its advertising? Why not have the state cancel its charter? Finally, if a business has a legitimate reason for existence and yet can be advertisingly gagged through legislation that will benefit only a minority, where will the line...
Herewith are excerpts from letters come to the desks of the editors during the past week. They are selected primarily for the information they contain, either supplementary to, or corrective of, news previously published in TIME...
...much I appreciate TIME after several months' reading of it. I am amused occasionally at some of the criticisms of other subscribers- the most amusing being those by someone whose ox has apparently been gored. I do not recall any weekly magazine, or monthly, either, for that matter, which has ever given so good a digest of current news, except, in a measure, The Independent, a number of years ago when it ran a weekly department of about eight pages in which it digested the week's news, but even it was not so good as TIME because...