Word: inferred
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...Spading has misunderstood me. And as the CRIMSON entitles his letter "A Good Answer," I dare infer that others have also...
...make up their sacrifice because her sacrifice was not fully accepted seems unworthy of their recent noble action. A debt is a debt and no amount of difference between the debtor and his creditor can wipe away the obligation until the debt is paid. Now for certain Europeans to infer that the Allies' years of fighting before the United States entered the war should be ample pay for the loans which we made them, not only is an alteration of the obligation of contract but shows a disappointing lack of appreciation of the service which America rendered...
...today's communication column appears a detailed and lively outburst against the vacillating and Prussian policy of the CRIMSON. Some of our more gullible readers may readily infer from this article that the CRIMSON is an instrument of the Nation's great munition concerns who are supposed to desire the most terrible of wars. It may be the case that one or two of the writer's accusations can be regarded seriously. He complains that we have declared war already by taking the Harvard Union for American Neutrality to task. War has not been declared against Germany, but against...
...junior and senior years so much emphasis will be placed upon the students's individual work that in many of the honors courses counting for two and three hours, the instructor will meet the students but once or twice a week. It would, however, be a serious mistake to infer from this that the honors courses, with their small number of required classroom hours, demand less from the student than the regular courses. The very opposite is the case. The nature of the work will make greater demands upon the student's industry and ability, for to a certain extent...
...other words, a study of the question leads one to infer that an important factor in the solution of the above figures is the larger appreciation of the influence of the physical upon the mental and the moral which is resulting in increased facilities for physical development...