Word: unjust
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...feel that the editorial of Wednesday, February 11, approving the Student Council's action on the basketball cheerleader proposal was one-sided and unjust. We certainly agree that the Indoor Athletic Building "reeks with masculinity," but if "it is no place for the installation of women," then forbid feminine spectators. After all, the girl cheerleaders would hardly invade the showers. As for "setting tradition in the heels," this brings to mind a CRIMSON editorial of April 15, 1952 which defended newly opened Burr Hall as "progress in stocking feet." Harvard is a liberal institution that has retained its fine reputation...
...paper's series] . . . [There are] no grounds whatever to sustain a conviction for contempt . . . The judge was utterly without power to require or compel publication . . . without pay [of the proof] he requested them to publish . . . If a worthy judge may employ contempt-of-court process to silence unjust criticism . . . then this same rule would enable an unworthy judge to silence the press in just criticism...
...impression left by this statement is, insofar as it applies to Mr. Davies, erroneous and unjust. Davies had no responsibility for the preparation of the paper you mention or any other papers on this subject. Insofar as he might have made any contribution toward their preparation (and there is actually no evidence either in the files or in people's memories that he had anything to do with this at all), such contribution could certainly not have been of an order different from that of dozens of other subordinate officials in the Department of State...
...truth are dependent upon freedom of thought . . . It is, in fact, good for truth to have to struggle with error . . . The conscientious expression of ideas must not be dealt with by a dungeon, a boycott or an index, nor by arbitrary governmental action, character assassination or the application of unjust economic or social pressures...
...College Bible," a list of rules, had its first entries in 1642. At this date, students were prohibited from frequenting the "society of such men as lead an unjust and dissolute life," and from taking tobacco, "unless permitted by the President, with the consent of their parents and guardians, and on good reason first given by a physician, and then in a sober and private manner...