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Word: secretly (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
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Usage:

...attacked without being given the slightest chance of defense. Although the facts may be entirely different from what his critic presumes, the receiver is denied the right to present his side of the case. In legal procedure the time when the identity of accusers could forever remain a secret from the accused fortunately passed into history along with the Inquisition. It is no more to be countenanced in the communications of today than it is in the courts of the present time. If there exists a just cause for complaint or a worthy suggestion, then it should be made openly...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: ANONYMOUS LETTERS. | 1/28/1919 | See Source »

Princeton will resume athletics on a pre-war basis but along more desired lines. Coaches are to be associated with the faculty through the department of physical education. Unnecessary expenses are to be cut down by curtailing extravagant salaries for coaches and the expense and extent of trips. "Secret practice" and "scouting" will be eliminated. The general decrease in the number of games to be played by any one team, and the reduction of the cost of admission to games for members of the competing colleges will be effected. It is planned to have three or four teams represent Princeton...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Pre-War Athletics at Princeton | 1/20/1919 | See Source »

...experiences with boys' clubs, characterizing social service work as a "revelation into the art of leadership." He said that it was perhaps harder than military service in that the ultimate purpose was not so clear, and urged men to take it up in order to learn the real secret of life--service. "Social welfare work is a laboratory for working out ideas conceived in the classroom here...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: MUST REPAY DEBT TO SOCIETY SAYS PETERS | 1/17/1919 | See Source »

...fifteen years now he has been recognized in well-informed circles, not so wide as they should be, as the foremost authority in the world on acoustics. If I do not say the only authority, it is merely because others have learned from him; for he made no secret of his discoveries, but gave them freely to architects and others with a generosity which has been sometimes ill requited...

Author: By Edwin H. Hall and Rumford PROFESSOR Of physics., S | Title: DEATH HASTENED BY DUTIES | 1/11/1919 | See Source »

...stimulus which prompted his determination to "make the world over"? There are hosts of men who have failed to achieve all that they might have because they lacked this very necessary attribute of true greatness. The vision to see, and the valor to be,--this twofold quality is the secret of success as disclosed to us in the lives of all men whose names are worthy to be recorded on the nation's roll of honor...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: LIVES OF GREAT MEN | 1/8/1919 | See Source »

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