Word: indirectly
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...people wish the reform. (b) The people are opposed to indirect elections, as shown by our experience with presidential electors...
Scientific training is of ethical value in some indirect way, but of greatest value in the direct way that it teaches us to look at things in an objective way, that is, to eliminate our personal equation. This is of great importance in science, but of even more and of far greater difficulty in the domain of conduct, for this latter is the study of our relations with our fellow men. In the domain of conduct we must, not as in science, have first ideas and conform to them acts and facts. Such ideas are meant as those instinctive...
...fees or admission money; or who shall have taught or engaged in any athletic exercise or sport as a means of a livelihood; or who shall at any time have received for taking part in any athletic sport or contest or any pecuniary gain or emolument whatever, direct or indirect, with the single exception that he way have received from the college organization, or from any permanent amateur association of which he was at the amount by which the expenses necessarily incurred by him in representing his organization in athletic contests exceeded his ordinary expenses...
...tendency to indifference toward the Mott Haven team. This is every now and then cropping out and it is not in accord with the spirit of the University. The time may come, when through a false and unlogical way of looking at things a few men may prove the indirect cause of defeat. This is not a mere possibility, but a decided probability. Should a misfortune of this kind come to us, we cannot but think those who were so largely responsible for it would feel sincere regret. Yet even if in spite of such setbacks, as the refusal...
...entrance fees or admission money; or who shall have taught or engaged in any athletic exercise or sport as a means of livelihood; or who shall at any time have received for taking part in any athletic sport or contest any pecuniary gain or emolument whatever, direct or indirect, with the single exception that he may have received from the college organization, or from any permanent amateur association of which he was at the time a member, the amount by which the expenses necessarily incurred by him in representing his organization in athletic contests exceeded his ordinary expenses...