Word: moralizes
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...Germany's indemnity hangs heavy on her head--it is a huge indemnity. Would she not leap at a chance to cancel it? Moral influence would be no deterrent; and furthermore Germany's desire for world domination is not gone, nor is it dormant. So evident is it, that in the minds of men of closest perception working amidst the Germans over there is the almost universal conviction that the war ended three months too soon. Germany made the War in an attempt for world domination and she still keeps that ambition in her mind, and adds to it according...
With the 7 to 0 defeat of the Eli stick-men at Philadelphia behind them Captain Bigelow's men have a moral support which ought to count heavily. The first game was characterized by the superior team play of the University septet who were in possession of the puck more than two thirds of the time, and by the individual brilliance of Captain Bigelow...
...meeting of the Student Liberal Club, held last night in the Trophy Room of the Union, Professor R. K. Hack discussed the problem of education, maintaining that a moral change of attitude on the part both of the students and of the Faculty must be the aim of those who seek an improvement in American education. Granting this hypothesis, the problem is, according to Professor Hack, to infect the community, both of students and of instructors, with the realization of the woeful state of education in this country and thus lead to a change of attitude...
Freedom of speech and of the press is capable of many definitions, both moral as well as legal; and there are times when an individual or an organization may, at the same time, keep within the technical limits set by the courts and far overstep the bounds of morality and common decency. A good illustration of such a case is the set of resolutions drawn up by the American Association for the Recognition of the Irish Republic at its first annual convention in Boston. The convention, after expressing its sympathy for Ireland and the cause of the "Irish Republic", proceeded...
...William Randolph Hearst, the cause of Ireland in America would have died a natural death. But as the case stands, these journals by their cheap sensational appeal to an impulsive and easily influenced class of people, have encouraged Irish sympathizers to acts and attitudes which amount to a moral disloyalty...