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Word: instinctiveness (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...majority of the voters in this country will take the cost of living to be the paramount issue of the November elections. The average man is a selfish beast, and holds his material comfort at home above the welfare of his more distant neighbors. Self-interest is a natural instinct, and by more than one token is it apparent that the hopes of business prosperity, more nearly equable tariff adjustments, trade stimulation and national economy which the election of a Republican ticket seems to insure, will prevail over the continuation of a Democratic administration with its attendant ills...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: HARDING AND COOLIDGE | 10/4/1920 | See Source »

...ubiquitous income tax receipt, it is not hard to discover the average man's financial resources. But even in default of this, rebates might be made proportional to other college expenses. A combination of the two methods would certainly serve to prevent well-to-do boys "with the commercial instinct strong within them," as the "Quadwrangler" puts it, from trying to beat the college down...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Communication | 5/5/1920 | See Source »

Some mitigation will come through cooperative management, but effective management must always be more or less autocratic in its application, however the autocrat may be appointed. And we can never make the individual task expressive of the creative instinct by any modification of industrial process that can now be forseen. In short, the man can no longer live in his job. The best part of his life and strength will continue to go to processes almost utterly sterilized of expression of the human spirit...

Author: By Joseph LEITER ., (SPECIAL ARTICLE FOR THE CRIMSON) | Title: MORE BALANCE NECESSARY IN PRESENT INDUSTRIAL SYSTEM | 4/13/1920 | See Source »

...courage you bring into it," might we have been the text of St. John O. Ervine's great play, "John Ferguson, which began its first week in Boston a the Hollis Monday evening. It is a word of unusual power destined to live because it deals with emotions, instinct and characters which will exist as lone as life itself exists...

Author: By J. G. N., | Title: THE THEATRE IN BOSTON. | 12/10/1919 | See Source »

Prompted by your editorial of Tuesday, May 27th, I venture to express a prevalent opinion with regard to the CRIMSON'S attitude toward the proposed "Harvard Daily." The instinct of self-defense must, of course, have prompted the CRIMSON to reply to the severe but true attack of the Harvard Magazine, but neither instinct nor reason can excuse the weakness and evasiveness of that reply. Literary pouting and stamping of the feet not only are no defense, but argue for the truth of the opposide view. The fact that the CRIMSON enjoys a monopoly as a college newspaper...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: An Expression of Opinion. | 5/31/1919 | See Source »

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