Word: fairness
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...authorities. The case was printed in scare-crow headlines in all our newspaper. In a later edition of the Boston Herald, in small type, at the fag-end of a long article on the riots, the statement was made that the accused had been released-nothing else. Can any fair-minded American believe that this is honest and fair dealing? Why was the world not told in as bold type and as plainly as the accusation was made that the man was not guilty? This is really what the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People asks--a fair...
Asked how he thought American university students could best aid reconstruction in Europe, Professor Levy-Bruhl replied: "First of all, you should become better informed on European problems and history. Americans have a fair knowledge of the British Empire, but of France and Germany they know little. France needs economic and financial help very badly. The war was a terrible blow to us; our most productive provinces were pillaged, and the debt we incurred is a heavy burden to carry...
Lynching is a denial of the right secured by law to every man accused of a crime to a fair trial before an established court. It brutalizes the communities which suffer it by breeding a spirit of lawlessness and cruelty in those young people who constantly witness barbarities unpunished and uncondensed. It blots our fair fame as a nation, for we cannot claim to be civilized until our laws are respected and enforced and our citizens secured against the hideous cruelties of which we are constantly furnishing fresh examples...
...Bureau of Vocational Guidance; Bremer Whidden Pond, in Landscape Architecture; lecturers: Daniel Starch, on Advertising; Arthur Orlo Norton, on History of Education; Joseph Lee, Dept. of Education; instructors: Dr. Chan-Chan Tsoo, in Mathematics; William Prescott Bentley, in Metallurgy for ten months from September 1, 1919; Gordon M. Fair, in Industrial Hygiene; George Alonzo Mirick, in Education; Stephen Francis Hemblin, in Horticulture; Alfred Chester Hanford, in Municipal Government; Albert Haertlein, in Civil Engineering; assistants: Lewis Adams Maverick, in Education; Robert Winternitz, in Business; Robert Mathew Thomson, in Industrial Hygiene; Roger Bruce Johnson, in Civil Engineering; Austin Teaching Fellows: Henry Matthew...
With only 30 candidates out on the first day of practice, the smallest number ever reporting in the last ten years, the University and Freshman cross-country teams bid fair to suffer from lack of material unless more men come out within the next few days. The University runners have established a splendid cross-country record in the last decade of dual meets with Yale, losing only once in the whole period, and setting a standard that the succeeding teams will have to go far to equal...