Word: respective
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...continue their dealings with I. P. & P., the present contract running until 1933. By its arrangement with C. P. & P. the Hearst organization will pay market prices for its paper, and as a shareholder in the manufacturing company will have assured protection of its future newsprint requirements. In that respect its position is similar to that of the New York Times, New York Daily News, Chicago Tribune, Boston Globe...
Meanwhile Boss Roraback was preoccupied with picking a Republican gubernatorial nominee to oppose Dean Cross. For all the accusations that he selfishly dictates party affairs with an eye cocked on his public utility holdings, he is reputed an honest Boss who enjoys wide respect and who will not stoop to downright crookedness to gain his ends. Last week as Connecticut Republicans were about to convene at Hartford, Boss Roraback settled on Lieut. Governor Ernest Elias Rogers as the man he would make Governor over the opposition of Dean Cross...
...restaurant has been completely modernized in every respect. A complete new kitchen, up-to-date in every aspect has been installed while the other improvements include a new central heating, and ice plant, the latest system of refuse disposal by the refrigeration method, a well-equipped dish-washing system, and up-to-date refrigeration. The services of a capable chef have also been secured...
...disagree. No attempt will be made to force upon you the views of any particular person or group. It is not the function of the faculty to dictate to the students. Harvard asks no blind subservience to the doctrines of any man. She bespeaks tolerance and fair play and respect for the sincere opinion of others. She frowns upon all narrow-ness; she resents the imputation of unworthy motives to those from whom we may happen to differ. Her motto is truth. "Ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free...
...their representatives to the essentials of law-making. Lawlessness will never be stopped by the passage of more laws, nor by the imposition of more severe punishments. Laws which violate natural rights and which the general will does not accept cannot be enforced. Laws which are unworthy of respect will not be respected. As Cardinal O'Connell said the other day: "History proves that goodness and virtue cannot be forced on a people by statutes or by machine guns." "It is impossible," says Brand Whitlock, "by the use of force, however strong or violent, to impose upon the moral sense...