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Word: progress (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1900-1909
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Usage:

...public has been the more directed to the great question. The negative has shown that trade-unionism has been has shown that trade-unionism has been a great necessity; and that its evils have not been comparable with the evils of other great movements of history making for the progress of civilization and the best interests of a people...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: YALE WINS THE DEBATE | 12/5/1903 | See Source »

...dwelt on the past of trade unionism the question is not one that calls for balancing past good results with past evil results. The discussion concerns a general tendency. Moreover, much of the good claimed by the negative came prior to the last twenty years. Furthermore all the industrial progress of those twenty years has not been due to trade unionism. The aims of unionism have been essentially selfish in disregarding the rights of the majority; and this is evidenced by strikes, boycotts and their attitude towards the courts. The affirmative claims that the methods of trade unionism in general...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: YALE WINS THE DEBATE | 12/5/1903 | See Source »

Beede, in rebuttal, pointed out that the affirmative had confined itself to the history of unionism, dewelling more upon it than the negative and addressing concert evidence of evil where the negative had merely asserted good. The negative, he said, has been two optimistic in regard to general progress. The affirmative has shown by concrete arguments a general tendency of disregard for the rights of the community

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: YALE WINS THE DEBATE | 12/5/1903 | See Source »

...recent report to the Overseers, Colonel Higginson praised very highly the development at Harvard of individual thinking as he has seen it exemplified in instructors and students. The report says in part: "During a connection of some years, I have seen steady progress in working out what is surely the highest result, that of training a department of highly educated teachers in a manner to secure individual development and mutual freedom of thought and action among them...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Col. Higginson Resigns from Visiting Committee. | 12/4/1903 | See Source »

...back-field developed a strong, vigorous attack, but the line has never reached the effectiveness of the men behind it. A scarcity of experienced men who were at once heavy and fast made the problem of building up the line difficult from the first, and team-work made little progress under the many changes and experiments in the personnel of the team. For a long time there was evident in the line a woeful lack of aggressiveness, due largely to the lack of confidence of the men in themselves and to the same unfamiliarity with the play of their team...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Harvard Team. | 11/21/1903 | See Source »

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