Word: frequent
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...without further friction. In labor disputes, perhaps more than anywhere else, violence can never be justified except as the last resort, in the face of actual danger. Its untimely use is invariably disastrous. When once we realize this, our labor conflicts will be at once less bloody and less frequent...
...this will be the first time that President Lowell has ever addressed the students of the University at an open meeting on any but distinctly academic topics, an unusual opportunity is offered tomorrow evening to hear a recognized authority on current history. Through frequent trips to Washington, where he had ample occasion to gain a first-hand knowledge of national happenings from the men concerned in them and with the background of his training and long instruction in the science of government, on which he has written several authoritative books, President Lowell knows his subject from the bottom. The speech...
...enemy, H. C. L., by showing the Blue runners the way to the tape in the games this afternoon, and thus cornering the straw market at the "Coop." Meanwhile the proletariat in the cheering sections can only jingle loose pennies in the pockets of their ulsters, well-worn by frequent use in the last few weeks, and find paltry satisfaction in the alibi supplied by the Weather...
...unhappily "Harvard indifference" is not yet a matter for the reminiscences of graybeards alone. Side by side with the encouraging results of the straw vote, we are again reminded that the three lower classes have been forced to consider an amendment to their constitution to guard against the too frequent occurrence of a minority election of class officers. While some remedy is undoubtedly necessary, it is a great pity that the necessity was ever allowed to arise. The undergraduate has been told by the outside world that he is the "hope of the future," until he can almost feel himself...
...often the principal contact a university maintains with its alumni consists of requests for assistance. Princeton has just announced a valuable plan whereby the University undertakes to do something for the alumni. Copies of lectures developing new ideas or throwing light on current events are to be distributed at frequent intervals to Princeton men wherever they may be. In this way the university offers to its students a life-long course, a course which will serve them long after they have received their diplomas and gone out into the world...