Word: soled
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...future attempts to excite nationalistic and racial prejudices on the part of unauthorized and obviously uninformed persons should be definitely discouraged. . . We must guard against allowing the flotsam of political prejudice casting upon us the stigma that we allow ourselves to be msekly impressed by odoriferous brochures whose sole motivation is the more petty aspects of race antagonism and national chillblains. In this letter I can only appeal to the good sense of the majority of Harvard students to ignore the ridiculous attempts of the nationalist wind-baggers who might possibly bring forth upon us the just condemnation...
...defending the concept of community regulated according to function, one aimed at spiritual ends with commerce as a mere thing to keep the body alive until death. It was fighting the rising concept of material progress, the search for wealth as an end in itself or as the sole way to happiness, the new idea of selfishness as an eternal law which made this the best possible of all worlds...
...Rollins board of trustees retorted that the A. A. U. P. investigators had befogged the sole important issue, the dismissal of Professor Rice, by bringing up tenure. The trustees accused one investigator of bias, of prying into other dismissals, of seeking to "coerce or bribe" Rollins into adopting A. A. U. P. tenure rules...
...Good News Broadcasters have been recruited. With each Broadcaster working on at least ten families the potential market is 10,000,000 consumers. Each Goodwin sales list would include one, and only one, article of its kind and price. Thus one list might include Pepsodent as its sole toothpaste, another Pebeco. Not more than 500,000 Good News Broadcasters would handle one list...
Though the contests with Yale still occupy the dominant position on Harvard athletic schedules, they are no longer the sole aim of Varsity programs. It has been recognized that the main function of all the games, aside from the financial one, is to provide instruction and competition for accomplished athletes. There ought, accordingly, to be a revision of the present unjust arrangement which permits a man to go without reward even though he has participated in all the games but that with Yale. Such a step is particularly necessary in those sports which do not permit of extensive last minute...