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Word: outbreak (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...outbreak of the war he enlisted in the Navy, and was stationed at Newport, R. L. in 1917 he filled the centre position on the Newport Naval Reserve team. Callahan returned to Yale early this fall...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: OLD SCHOOLBOY COMPANIONS CONTEND ON RIVAL ELEVENS | 11/22/1919 | See Source »

...wholesale regard for law and order coupled with an exaggerated emotional sense of justice do not always work smoothly in double harness. Doubtless, to the legal mind, an outbreak of mob violence is the uspeakable; correction of evils should be undertaken by the ballot--no matter whether the base offender against the primal law of harmony in the state die of old age in the penitentiary while awaiting trial for his deeds. Doubtless, Mr. Fairbanks, you are right...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Another Explanation. | 10/9/1919 | See Source »

Certainly the rest of the letter adopts a very different tone. "Mobs will be mobs" it says in effect. "The writer does not apologize for the outbreak, but merely attempts to explain it cause. . . . only to be expected . . . . who can answer for . . . . No wonder . . . ." Moral censure is certainly an ugly thing, and one likes to see it deprecated; but such deprecation to be effective should be consistent. If Mr. Rosenblatt writes in this truly Christian spirit of the lynching, then the least he can say of the original assault is that criminals will be criminals; that, in view...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Must Mobs be Mobs? | 10/6/1919 | See Source »

...interrupted for a time in his football career by the outbreak of the war. At that time he became an Ensign in the Navy, and was a member of the staff of Admiral H. P. Jones, commander of the Cruiser and Transport Force. The ship Murray was on, the S. S. Santiago, went down on July...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: W. J. MURRAY CHOSEN TO CAPTAIN ELEVEN | 10/4/1919 | See Source »

...never before, in the Middle West, is steadily advancing to the fore. With the perpetration in Omaha of the basest crimes by negroes, the escape of most of the criminals, in spite of police vigilance, and the mediocre and insufficient punishment administered by the courts, the outbreak of a lynching fever was only to be ex-expected. The writer does not apologize for the outbreak, but merely attempts to explain its cause...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: An Explanation. | 10/3/1919 | See Source »

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