Word: trained
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...Pullman," in your magazine issue of May 11 in which you say, after referring to the Pullman porter as the factotum of the car and his trustworthiness: "The necessity for this trustworthiness was evident last week when a Pullman porter went berserk on a Montreal-bound New York Central train...
...editorial continues: "Armed with a ventilator stick and an emergency axe, the Negro felled five passengers and three of the train crew...
...strike a single passenger, but defended himself against passengers who sought to strike him. It is also important to note that, according to Smith, the emergency axe was only secured by him after the emergency box was broken open by some one of the passengers or the train crew, who took out the emergency sledge hammer, the same having been seen in the possession of one of the passengers...
...have had enough experience already to convince us that the office does not seek the man. There is no hope for democracy unless intelligent and honest men run for office, and they will have little success in the race for office unless they are trained for it." Stating thus, in an article written for the CRIMSON, the problem which confronts those anxious for good government, T. N. Carver, David A. Wells Professor of Political Economy, makes a frank appeal for a "department of demagogics" to train men for winning the public favor. Professor Carver's article follows...
...play the role of the shrinking violet public offices will be filled by the uneducated, the self-seeking and the corrupt. There is no hope for democracy unless intelligent and honest men run for office. They will have little success in the race for office unless they are trained for it. They will not be well trained unless colleges and universities train them...