Word: unjust
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1929
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Rules which prohibit transfer students from representing their colleges in athletics if they have taken part in any competitive sport at the college from which they transfer are obviously unjust. With the present high scholastic standing required for eligibility at most of the better colleges, the one year rule is quite sufficient to discourage the tramp athlete. Let us hope for the time when a man will be no longer mistrusted and prevented from getting the most out of his college life simply because he happens to have a liking for and some ability in athletic competition...
Stirred by A. H. Miles' unjust accusation against TIME on the grounds of grammatical inaccuracy (issue of Mar. 9); I hasten to support you in a matter of vital importance- whether "broadcast" or "broadcasted" is the proper past tense of the verb "to broadcast...
This Baker incident would not in itself be so important, were it not that it appears to give a chance for expression to a tendency which seems to me pernicious, unthinking, and to the last degree unjust. I refer to the tendency of opposition to President Lowell and the Administration, which tendency will assuredly come to life again with renewed vigor now, at the regrettable departure of Dr. Hotson, although there is logically no excuse for its doing so. In cannot see any reason or excuse for such an opposition to an unintelligent criticism of President Lowell. And I feel...
...with this opinion, this assumption that critics must quarrel. There has been much caustic commenting on various and single incidents; and because the position of President Lowell and the Corporation was not clear some of it has been unjust. The real issue is at last apparent: Is there an important place in Harvard for a "permanent school for playwrights"? The CRIMSON believes that theatrical training has such a place in the University; and that the administration committed a serious error in judgment when it adopted its present opinion...
...work. The absurd preoccupation with delicately shaded course grades which now descends like a plague on the College at examination periods will them be a horror of the past. Some system of judging a man's work is necessary, but there is no reason why the present unbalanced and unjust machinery should be allowed to operate forever...