Word: elementally
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...wine one need not drink the whole cask. . . . I am aware that there are many honest workers in painting as well as in literature who object to criticism entirely. They are quite right. Their work stands in no intellectual relation to their age. It brings us no new element of pleasure. It suggests no fresh departure of thought, or passion, or beauty, it should not be spoken of. It should be left to the oblivion that it deserves. Intentions...
...proved to be a serious hindrance to the work of the trade union. Fortunately many such men are now showing a more tolerant spirit, often meeting the workers to discuss the conditions under which they work and occasionally permitting them to have a part in the management. That element among the employers that is typified by Mr. Gary of the United States Steel Corporation is disappearing, and the element represented by Mr. Schwab of the Bethlehem Steel is becoming more prominent...
...address at the convention of the National Manufacturing Association in Atlantic City, Mr. Schwab said that the time had come when employers must recognize the right of employees to have a larger share in determining the conditions under which they work, stating that the human element in industry must be recognized and that the workers are justified in resenting being considered as machinery and treated as such...
...story, has passed the more difficult period of youth and has reached the age where real romance may be his. Clarence is a discharged soldier hero, who in the course of four amusing acts falls in love with and finally marries a pretty governess. But without the element of adolescence the plot would be too commonplace for mention, so the action revolves chiefly on the sentimental affairs of the 17-year-old Bobble Wheeler and his sister Cora, who has just attained the flapper age of sweet sixteen. The play is a comedy of incidents in the life...
Canadian and Canadian newspapers will naturally find it difficult not to resent keenly the action of this gutter element among our nearest neighbors at the expense of an emblem which means a good deal to us. But we should realize that the insult is less to the British flag than to the United States itself...