Word: marred
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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Best general references: John Roach, Shall Americans build ships? in N. Amer. Review, May 1881; Cong. Record, Feb. 26, 27 and Mar. 12, 1891; David A. Wells, Our Merchant Marine...
...Reed in No. Am. Rev., Vol. 150, pp. 382, 537, (March, May, 1890), and vol. 151, p. 238 (Aug., 1890; other articles in vol. 151, pp. 237 248, (Sept. 1890), and vol. 153 pp. 737-749, (Dec., 1891); A. B. Hart in Atlantic Mo., vol. 67, p. 380, Mar., 1891); Joseph Chamberlain in Nineteenth Cent., vol. 28, p. 861; Speeches in Cong. Rec., vol. 21, (1889-91); part...
...Party adlesion tends to purify politics; under a strict party vote. - (a) Deals would be eliminated. - (b) Bribery would be less frequent. - (c) Factional strife would be less common. - (d) Conscientious men more influential when in than when out of a party; H. H. Darling, Harvard Monthly, Mar...
...liberal pension policy strengthens the government. - (a) It intensifies national feeling and patriotism - (b) It acts as a preventive of war by keeping before the public the evils of war. - (c) It strengthens the volunteer sentiment of the country; Paddock in Cong. Rec'd. Mar...
...astonishing achievements, he cannot but remark how each man is compelled to follow one line of business or profession and so keep on in a narrow channel. Now this is the very idea that we must dismiss from our minds and it is the very principle that will mar the noblest minds. No such opinion prevails in a true university. "For if a university stands for anything it stands for the development of the full man, of large character and with sympathies bound up with an intense interest in his own peculiar line of work." And this is what called...