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Word: unjustness (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...obvious advantages and benefits to be derived from belonging to the Union, and from time to time the management has added new attractions to the institution with the hope of inducing more men to join. A great deal of the criticism that has been passed on the Union is unjust, but it is admitted by everyone that there is room for improvement. To make the Union what it should be is a problem, the solution of which rests primarily with the undergraduates; the alumni have done their part. The greatest difficulty in managing the Union has been in finding...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE FORUM TONIGHT. | 1/8/1913 | See Source »

...attention of our readers to the communication on the Speakers' Club printed in another column. This communication seems to refute absolutely the several criticisms made against the Club in the communication in yesterday's issue of the CRIMSON, and the facts presented show that the criticisms made were unjust and censurable, and untrue as regards some statements made. Like all other undergraduate organizations the Speakers' Club has its faults, but in the main it is doing a splendid and much-needed work. It is not merely an organization of prominent debaters and speakers in the College, but one whose membership...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE SPEAKERS' CLUB. | 6/12/1912 | See Source »

During the last few years, urged on by somewhat unjust criticism from other colleges and by the uprearing of a new temper from within, it has become the fashion here at Harvard to work for "college spirit." To further it, so many flaming lamps of advice are thrust into student hands that some are quite unable to decide what torch shall light for them the academic road and others burn their fingers in trying to carry too many. With the current number of the Advocate as a text the reviewer ventures to give some advice on a condition hitherto passed...

Author: By H. B. Sheahan m.a., | Title: Review of Current Advocate | 3/7/1912 | See Source »

...that the workers give all they can to their boys and take in return what the boys can teach them. To give everything and take nothing is impossible and would be unprofitable to all concerned; to give nothing and try to take everything is equally impossible and would be unjust. Social service is something more than to take a set program and follow it through day in and day out in one's work; it is to take charge of a boys club, or something similar, and put into its training all the originality of the mind, all the original...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Speeches at Brooks House | 10/4/1911 | See Source »

...contributing in the long run to our own welfare and safety. On exactly the same principle the honest student values the protection which the proctor's presence affords. It gives a significance to his grades and to his diploma which they would otherwise lack. It protects him from unjust suspicion in making inquiry about the time, borrowing a pencil, or in making other proper communications. The honor system may work better than inefficient proctoring as a discourager of cribbing; but if it is to be compared with efficient proctoring it cannot supply the element of guaranty, unless it involves...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Harvard Diploma a Guarantee of Honesty. | 5/19/1911 | See Source »

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