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Word: heeds (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Oxford, in which he referred to his countrymen as the "English." The speech was interrupted by loud cries of "British!" "What aboot the Scots!" But Salisbury went doggedly ahead and continued to say "English." In the same spirit France continues her policy in the Ruhr. She pays no heed to the economic consequences of her occupation of Germany's great industrial area, and, as obstinate as was the Marquis of Salisbury in saying "English," France is obstinate in believing that she will get what she wants in the Ruhr. Opinion. Unbiased opinion does not castigate the French for wanting...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign News: The Ruhr: Mar. 31, 1923 | 3/31/1923 | See Source »

...peace with dishonor, assumes that there has been a fundamental change in human nature. It concerns me in that it is making an impression on many earnest, serious minds, especially on the minds of women, some of them educators. But what surprises me more than anything else, is that heed is given to it in a small proportion in the student body in some colleges. In fact, in some of them, the faculty are notoriously pacifist. A study of history will quickly point out the danger of such pacificism, which surely points to the fear that the sacrifices...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: URGES COLLEGE MEN TO PREPARE FOR WAR | 3/29/1923 | See Source »

...thousand vacant aces of adjacent harbor land to ocean going vessels. Curiously enough the project originated more than a hundred years ago in the epidemic of artificial waterways which produced the Eric canal and several others less famous in New York, Ohio, and Pennsylvania. Then as now there was heed of increased facilities; then because the railroads were not yet in existence--now because the increased costs, embargoes and the like, have brown them into disrepute...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: LOCKS | 2/13/1923 | See Source »

...have ever had the satisfaction of taking part in a regular Harvard cheer with nine Harvards on the end you must have felt that the Harvard men on the field cannot have failed to heed this sign of encouragement. The feeling it incites is something more than that of the regular cheer: it inspires player and spectator alike, makes the former feel that every Harvard man in the stands is behind him and the cheering section feel that it is doing everything it possibly can to help the team...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Communication | 11/22/1922 | See Source »

...then that Harvard College graduates, recognizing the right of Harvard undergraduates to precede them but denying that graduate school men should share pro rata in ticket distribution with them when there is only a limited number of seats at Harvard's disposal, should ask the H. A. A. to heed this situation? May we hope that the words of Harvard College spoken by its official spokesman, the CRIMSON, will bear weight for the future? SoL A. ROSENBLATT...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: More About Tickets | 11/16/1922 | See Source »

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