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Word: sores (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1929
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Usage:

Yesterday in his address President Eliot spoke as no other man living could speak. From the splendid richness of his experience he can look over and beyond the temporary sore spots of today. His speech was colored with all the farsighted liberalism which has been the keynote of his life. In most men's careers it is possible to pick out a span of years, ten or twenty, and refer to it as "his day". President Eliot showed yesterday that "his day", as every college class has felt for the past fifty years...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: CONTEMPORARIES | 10/18/1922 | See Source »

Plainly there is something wrong; the question is where? Before finding a remedy, it is first necessary to find the sore spot. In this case it may be one or all of three things. The attitude of the class towards German as a language may be hostile,--but that is not likely; or the attitude towards the courses in German may be wrong,--that is possible. The Requirements may be too strict either because the standard is too high, or the field too narrow,--that also is possible. Finally, the courses may be inadequate because of the great difficulty...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: A TOOL OR A HURDLE | 10/7/1922 | See Source »

This is particularly true here in the United States, where anybody's business is everybody's, and the free and constant expression of public opinion on every conceivable question, is a sore tempiation to foreign ambassadors. Public opinion, when properly guided, sways everything before it in this country, yet its force is swayed by cross rumors and expressions of personal views. There is no censorship of the press and everybody reads and criticizes. What one paper will not print another will, and anyone with anything important or sensational to say sooner or later finds himself with an audience. Nolens, volens...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: OBSERVING THE MIDDLE COURSE | 6/16/1922 | See Source »

...Lloyd George's triumphant defense of his policies before the House of Commons yesterday, he laid his finger with characteristically severe touch on the outstanding sore spot in European politics-the reparations problem. A large part of all the post-war difficulties centers about the amount of the payments exacted from Germany by the Treaty of Versailles; and yet, as Lloyd George has said, the treaties did not cause the reparations. Their creation is due to the fact that there is something to repair. If the Versailles compact is altered, the burden is merely shifted from Germany to France without...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE PATIENT--EUROPE | 4/4/1922 | See Source »

...average health. The press is filled with rumors of a new influenza epidemic. Surely we cannot afford to play with contagion here, where disease once started is apt to spread throughout the University like a forest fire. Fortunately, the cessation of classes offers a partial fire-break. But sore-throats and anesges are not to be tolerated; no man with even an incipient cold should shun the doctor's office. The service is free; the safeguard of an examination is not only an advantage to the man but a duty to his neighbors...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: 'WARE FLUI | 1/28/1922 | See Source »

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