Word: unfair
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...debts, the faction of commuters now howling about their Dudley Hall dues has masked its cries in a cloud of pious self-righteousness, while imputing to Peregrine White designs of a sinister and distinctly un-American character. If the bill under complaint were in any way unfair, a voice of objection should certainly be raised. But since payment of the five dollar charge for the second semester was clearly pledged by the would-be defaulters, the imputation of skullduggery on the part of the Dudley committee is as absurd as it is false. And unlike a creditor nation, the University...
...both of which nauseate the A. M. A. When Drs. Ross & Loos acquired 40,000 clients and a staff of 50 doctors, the A. M. A. expelled them. Subsequently lawyers forced the A. M. A. to take Drs. Ross & Loos back into the fold, on the technicality of an unfair trial...
...Sirs: Unfair, incorrect is TIME'S assertion on second news page, March 23 issue, that the Battle of New Orleans was won "15 days after the War of 1812 was over." Inference is that Senator Rose McConnell Long was wrong when she told a Senate committee that "Had we not won that battle, we would have been a British colony west of the Mississippi." The fact is ... historians now agree that the Battle of New Orleans was fought before not after, the War of 1812 was over. Said the Treaty of Ghent, signed Dec. 24, 1814: "All hostilities, both...
...results of such meetings will be published on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays in the CRIMSON beginning tomorrow. During the summer these will be revised if an unfavorable reaction indicates it is non-representative or unfair comment, and then printed in the first half of the Freshman Confidential Guide...
...Diplomat von Ribbentrop sat down, he realized that the Council must almost certainly vote to condemn Germany, hastily popped up again to plead that it would be "unfair" to Germany to vote at once. Seemingly the brothers-in-law hoped that even a brief delay would bring intervention favorable to Germany from Prime Minister Stanley Baldwin. This was still possible, but French Foreign Minister Pierre Etienne Flandin, tall, big-boned and fair, again showed that he knows remarkably well how to handle Britons. The usual sort of Frenchman would almost certainly have demanded an immediate vote, and in so doing...