Word: fair
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...clock they follow the graduates and the members of the lower classes to the Stadium where E. F. Clark Jr. '28 will give the Ivy oration. Three will also be cheering by the graduate classes, presentation of the Senior class banner to 1931, singing of "Fair Harvard" and the confetti battle...
...good Republicanism and Mr. Gannett will not interfere. He reassures the doubtful: "It is my belief that a newspaper publisher should be free from any political ambitions. . . . The editor of the Democrat and Chronicle . . . will not have to obey orders ... so long as he is intellectually honest, sincere, fair, tolerant and clean. I do not care fundamentally for money . . . have no special interests ... no axes to grind...
...must have its planetarium, gave $500,000 for its construction on the lake front island east of the Field Museum. Apparatus and instruments will be of the finest, having been ordered from Carl Zeiss, who promised delivery in the fall ot 1929. The 1933 world's fair will see the planetarium performing in its noble 200 foot hall; projecting more than 4,500 planets, planetoids, and stars in orbital motion upon a domed sky 100 feet in diameter...
...lounge where a British immigration official told him that he was not permitted to set foot on British soil. The only reason given him was "instructions from the Home Office." Befuddled, vexed, Mr. Thaw told reporters: "This is amazing. I cannot understand it at all. England was fair and square when I was here before, 23 years ago. ... I am a friend of Secretary Mellon. I have wired him. . . ." Later, Mr. Thaw obtained a French visa, left the Aquitania at Cherbourg, motored to Paris. But Secretary Mellon had not helped...
...each what she produces" seems fair enough, until the impossibility of ascertaining the amount each produces proves the plan nonsensical...