Word: sentimentally
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...petition from a large number of undergraduates, received a week ago by the H. A. A. that boxing be recognized as an intercollegiate sport at the University, was considered at length by the Committee, but official action was deferred until the general sentiment of the undergraduate body on the petition could be more fully determined...
...motives of racial antagonism. That is the great danger. It means contempt and suspicion among all countries and the estrangement of nations between whom there should be the fullest degree of confidence. Men must acquire a spirit of international brotherhood and good fellowship, without which radical change of sentiment no agreement or peace can ever take place...
College is the preparation for the Battle of Life. We have heard the sentiment more than once. We subscribe to its validity, more or less. Therefore, does it not seem more profitable that we chew on the soap and rubbers of collegiate liberalism rather than that we be thrust, ignorant and untutored, into an unpaternal world of which we know nothing? Under a liberal policy in college, we may learn not to snap at old dogs' ears when we go forth into the world. And there, certainly, lies the value of a liberal tradition. F. W. GERHART '25. December...
...follows, therefore, that American sentiment is correct in so far as it assumes that the Conference cannot stop half way: that is, the mere limitation of navies. In view of the general opinion of France as expressed in the above quotation, it seems logical that if navies are very much reduced some association for defense must be established among the powers. Such an association is nothing but Article X in the Covenant of the League of Nations; the proposal of the "Temps" is also identical with it. Where American opinion goes astray is in its failure to perceive that, since...
...Cummings' speech this evening will deal with the popular demand for international peace during the last twenty years and the public sentiment brought forth by such attempts as the League of Nations and the Disarmament Conference now in progress in Washington...