Word: inroads
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...will come after the struggle is ended in the only way it can be ended, when an irritated, resentful and suffering public opinion will proclaim that we ought to make an immense invasion and inroad on the legitimate rights of organized labor. Should that reaction come, it will be the duty of Liberals to preserve and secure the legal rights of organized labor...
Doctors customarily treat other doctors without a fee. Now and then some successful practitioner, deluged by a host of ailing colleagues, has revolted against this inroad on his time, has rendered bills, has lost much of his free practice. In Germany, some of the profession are now in active conflict on this point. Prof. Julius Schwalbe, editor of the Deutsche Medizin-ische Wochenschrift, is leading the attack on this ancient custom, and cites the case of a specialist in diseases of the eye who treated a colleague suffering from a severe in flammation of the iris. The specialist said that...
...hard luck which has been camping on Coach Chase's trail all season made another inroad into the Crimson ranks yesterday. Leekley, the team's high scorer and Hesse, dependable replacement men at either guard or for ward, were both absent from practice on account of illness, and it is doubtful if either can play tonight...
...their halls. It is hoped to make a great deal more of this series than ever before, and, as men will be needed to fill out the line-ups, everyone interested is urged to report Monday afternoon. The games will extend only through Thursday, so that no serious inroad will be made on the men's time. Members of the Freshman squad not on the team are especially desired, as they will be permitted to participate in this series. Five points towards the dormitory championship shield will go to the hall winning, while three and one points will be given...
...reduced next year so that there would be only two men to a seat, and that the club tables should be kept precisely as they now are. This would make the hall accommodate about one hundred and forty men less; but it is considered much preferable to any inroad upon the social side of the life in the hall. The other plan is that general tables should be abolished, but, all tables being given to clubs, that each club should have a number of men in excess of the table's seating capacity. By this the hall could accommodate...