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Word: forgetting (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1929
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Usage:

...Managers sometimes forget," said Mr. F. C. Hood, treasurer of the Hood Rubber Company, in a speech at a conference of the Associated Industries of Massachusetts, "that they must establish their credit with their employees-credit for honest leadership, credit for just dealings, credit for just wage payments, credit for right working conditions, credit for sympathy with human needs, credit for understanding the ambition of fellow workers, credit for the recognition of faithful service, credit for kindness and credit for thoughtfulness...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: AN ERRONEOUS LABOR POLICY | 11/2/1920 | See Source »

...stage affects the younger people more than any other form of art--for after all the stage is an art though we sometimes seem to forget it. So a direct product of the community theatre will be the turning of the theatre-going habit of the young into higher channels...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Coburns See Great Possibilities in Community Theatre Idea | 10/27/1920 | See Source »

...other hand, it is disappointing, to say the least, to see England so ready to forget her ally in her eagerness to reach the German market. Although her position may not be so unfortunate as is that of France, she should respect, rather than disregard, the test put upon her friendship, so long as that test is not unreasonable. Should England resume full trade relations with Germany at the; present time, she would be signing the commercial death-warrant of the heroic nation across the Channel. France has asked bread; shall England give a stone...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: "ET TU BRUTE!" | 10/15/1920 | See Source »

...editors. There is much good grain among the chaff. The Class-Day number contains the Class Poem by James Gore King Jr.--remarkable above all for its sincerity. One stanza every man in 1920 who hears it and every man in every other class who reads it will not forget...

Author: By T. L. Hoob ., | Title: ADVOCATE'S CLASS DAY NUMBER MAKES "STRONG FINISH" | 6/22/1920 | See Source »

...Illustrated by the Berger-Case," followed by an adumbration of the issue, with a "qualitatively different perspective," by Mr. Harold J. Laski, who thinks that to act as Mr. Berger did "is of the essence of citizenship," and that "What we (meaning the English) would almost above all forget is our imprisonment of Bertrand Russell." He compares the intolerance of the United States to that of Germany before the war, and that of Russia before the revolution, and ends with the comforting remark that Mr. Berger's case only faintly reflects the temper which caused such upheaval, yet its appearance...

Author: By T. L. Hoob ., | Title: ADVOCATE'S CLASS DAY NUMBER MAKES "STRONG FINISH" | 6/22/1920 | See Source »

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