Word: supporting
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...bill, which motion shall be decided by two-thirds vote without debate; (b) the time for vote shall be extended if necessary, to allow every opponent of the bill so desiring to have one hour in which to state his objections to the bill." The Seniors will support the affirmative of the question and will speak in the following order: E. C. Johnson, F. W. Catlett, D. A. McCabe. J. Lebowich is the alternate. The order of the Junior speakers will be: M. M. Horblit, H. O. Ruby, I. I. Mattuck. R. P. Dietzman is the alternate. H. K. Stockton...
...Assembly Room of the Union. The question for debate is as follows: "Resolved, That state boards of arbitration with full powers of investigation should be established throughout the United States for the purpose of settling labor disputes." W. T. Foster 1G., and G. W. Hinckley 1L., will support the affirmative, and J. Daniels '04 and F. B. Wagner 2L., the negative. Hon. Arthur P. Stone '93 will be the critic...
...think most of the undergraduate body will agree that the calls for subscriptions for miscellaneous athletic activities are annoying. One is called upon to subscribe as a matter of class loyalty, college support--or even to help some collector "make" the managership of some team...
...subscriptions by the undergraduate body were necessary to support athletics--this would not be so objectionable, but the Athletic Committee is well able to finance all the athletic activities without calling for subscriptions. It seems to me that if the Athletic Committee would furnish in the concrete the numerals and insignia it awards in the abstract, it would do much to further the most legitimate of athletic activities--the interclass contests...
...must not forget that those who differ with them have rights guaranteed them under our free government. But the fact that this is a nation bent on the betterment of the laboring class, that trade-unionism has been agitated and reagitated, and yet has failed to receive the support of eighty-five per cent of the American wage-earners, is strong proof of our contention,--namely, that trade-unionism for the past twenty years has pursued unwise methods, has violated rights fundamental to our whole social structure, has fostered a spirit of selfish tyranny, has sought to dominate the industrial...