Word: fearfully
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...libraries of Greater Boston, certain lovers of learning usually appropriate it from the shelves of Widener two days before the hour examination and browse through it. When the examination has passed the book reappears. Common considerations of honesty and fair play do not deter these people; they brave the fear of discovery and the wrath of the librarian in their omnivorous search for knowledge. To call these people schoolboys is to understate the case; a schoolboy sometimes doesn't know any better...
...else. But the laboring men argue that none of them like to complain to their chief, because, in case of a necessary reduction of hands, the "agitators" would be the first to go. A man outside, skilled in estimating labor conditions, could say what he thought with no fear of dismissal, and could give a more comprehensive view of what was going on in all the factories. This right of representation is no very radical plat-form; it is not only-justified but inevitable. An employer is in no way compelled to accept the advice offered, provided...
...sixth game this fall added one more victory to the credit of the University nine yesterday on Soldiers Field. The visitors, the South Boston Collegians, were blanked 3-0. E. S. Hardell '21, F. K. Bullard '20, and E. F. Goode Unc., the three University pitchers, performed the remarkable fear of holding their opponents hitless for the seven innings to which the game was limited. In fact, not a man of the South Boston nine reached first base until the seventh inning, when Goode passed two batters...
...first, of course, being the group of men which controls the minds of the people by owning the factories in which the people work, by owning and directing the newspapers which the people read, and by directing mounted soldiers (the Russians call such soldiers Cossacks) to intimidate and cast fear into the heart of the people; the workers are afraid to refuse wealth to these men; the rest are the workers, the producers. The first, simply, is that group of folk who live on unearned increment; the second, the great majority from whose extra toil comes the unearned increment...
...ascribed to various causes, among which Mr. Colby '21 emphasizes the dearth of old fashioned orthodox religion. He sees possibilities of license in the present opportunities for liberty of speech and opinions in this country, and points out the dangers we face through lack of some central autocratic fear-inspiring authority...