Word: wholeness
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Dates: during 1930-1930
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These two were inextricably confused by TIME when reporting Law Enforcement Commissioner Mackintosh's plea that the Commission "go to the guts of this whole Prohibition Question." TIME, having reprimanded its National Affairs Editor, gladly returns each Jurist to his own foundation, with apologies...
Result: From within Leader Baldwin's own party he was mocked by Baron Beaverbrook for first swallowing the Canadian scheme whole, then spitting out the wheat kernel. "Baldwin! Baldwin! Again Baldwin!" sneered the press peer in one of his papers. "We want no more of Baldwin!" (Baron Beaverbrook of course advocates food tariffs.) As a matter of expediency the MacDonaid cabinet pigeonholed Canada's straightforward proposal last week in an especially created committee, sorely vexed Canada's Bennett who soon afterward gave a dinner to all important correspondents in London, thereby, perhaps, increasing their sympathy with...
...machinery of law exists in America, but the thing does not work properly. It does not work properly because the public conscience does not function as it should. Though gangsters are an inconsiderable proportion of the whole population in America, they carry on their activities unchecked, and the only reason for that can be that at the bottom the public does not mind them, does not feel what they do is wrong. You cannot blame the police in such a case. The police are merely the instruments whereby the public sense of what is right or wrong expresses itself. . . ." Neither...
...resurrect it temporarily. On July 4 about 100 students journeyed to St. Johnsbury to participate in a celebration there. They were so noisy on the train and in the town, where they stopped a congressman's speech with boos and ridicule, that the faculty began an investigation. The whole student body took up the protest on the night of July 12 and for four hours pandemonium reigned. Horns were blown continuously, windows were broken and furniture was smashed. Effigies of several prominent faculty members were stoned, tortured, burned, and hanged. This uprising, always referred to as "The Great Awakening...
...whole thing is an amusing spectacle of undergraduate journalism at its best. We have no doubt that the Crimson gang is enjoying itself, that it is tickled to death with the results of its outburst, and that it is still sure that it was right in the first place. And the attendant publicity is an important factor as well...