Word: judgments
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...University nine started fast and played smooth ball until Booth got in a hole in the seventh, when errors in judgment allowed the visitors to chase over their first counter. The Crimson batters touched the Rhode Island pitcher for 12 hits while Booth was holding the losing artillery to seven blows, six of which were bunched in the last two sessions...
...people were to be impeached for some of your conduct in using your influence, there would be a lot of vacant chairs here." (Applause.) But that sally was considered irrelevant. And for this theory of impeachment there is good authority. Chief Justice Taft has said: "The trial and the judgment [of Judge Archibald in 1913] were most useful in demonstrating to all incumbents of the Federal bench that they must be careful in their conduct outside of court as well as in the court itself and that they must not use the prestige of their judicial position, directly or indirectly...
...took his chastisement with something akin to genius, an infinite capacity for taking punishment. Mr. Berlenbach's punishment was 15 1/2 lb. heavier, but he was very brave. In the end the judges put their heads together and said to each other and to the world, that in their judgment, in such a contest the heavier...
...brings on us and then is itself necessary to cure them. Going off on a different line. Davenport represented himself as a Spartan coming to Athens, which was represented by Harvard, to show the people there that their ideal of education was not the one on which any final judgment should be made concerning the educational progress of other communities
...building newspapers was to lend money to promising men-young men-desirous of entering new publishing territory. If they made good, he had control of their property and policies. If they failed, they might pay him back whenever they could. He was not an insistent creditor. He counted his judgment as much a part of the investment as their honor. And it was against his instincts to "sell out"; once he had built something, he kept it. He did not barter, destroy, amalgamate and otherwise treat newspapers and newspapermen as impersonal bits of merchandise in the manner of his late...