Word: sharing
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Dates: during 1920-1920
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Radicals contend that society is dividing into two rival classes; the middle-class trade unionists would apparently split it into three. If they are aiming, as they assert, to protect the consumer, they have overlooked the fact that capitalists and laborers are also consumers, who share the public interest equally with those persons who are eligible for middle-class trade unionism...
...University game was fast and rough, but the high score does not indicate the fight that Technology put up. At no time was the University free from the danger of attack, and a large share of the credit should go to J. Holmes '21, who played an excellent game in goal for the University...
...right to assume that the only alternatives are radicalism and ultra conservatism, and that those who refuse to swallow either of these dogmas are in immediate danger of "falling off backwards" from the fence upon which our friend has conveniently placed them. We are confident that the liberals will share in the "wedding feast" to as great an extent as the "oil-bearing" conservatives. Today, true Americanism consists not in ridicule and vituperation, but in sincere striving for the co-operation of the elements that constitute American society. IRVING ROSENBLOOM '23. HENRY J. FRIENDLY...
After four days and a half of mentally whirling the globe around to look at the other side, one was sure to feel the hugeness and at the same time the nearness of areas which do not share the civilization of North America and Western Europe. A black line representing the Cape to Cairo railway was superposed on a map of the Western hemisphere; it wriggled south from New York, across the Caribbean and the bulge of South America, and came to an end somewhere west of Chile, at about the latitude of the Robinson Crusoe Islands. Startling facts were...
What is best in our civilization? Our scientific knowledge surpasses that of other nations; let us share it with them and lift them out of ignorance and ill-health into fuller and freer lives. The story of the men and women who have given, not their money, but their lives, to the task of founding schools and curing the sick in foreign lands was repeated with new fascination. Dozens of doctors, teachers, and agricultural workers came to inspire with their presence the new generation of collegians. But the best thing in our civilization, said the leaders of the convention...