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"sternness" Definitions
  1. an attitude that is serious and shows that you do not approve of somebody/something, or shows that you expect somebody to obey you

70 Sentences With "sternness"

How to use sternness in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "sternness" and check conjugation/comparative form for "sternness". Mastering all the usages of "sternness" from sentence examples published by news publications.

All this softheaded sternness and flabby tough talk is embarrassing.
His sense of humor can turn to sternness in a second.
Conversely, though, women are also quicker to be reprimanded for perceived sternness.
" Mr. West, it said, had "the jaw, height and sternness for the part.
They work by essentially treating addiction with courtroom theater, a mixture of sternness and kindness.
We gathered behind walls and inside houses to avoid the sternness of the Islamic Revolution.
Vajiralongkorn does none of that, cultivating instead an image of sternness, command, and Olympian distance from ordinary people.
White Jessica Tandy is giving black Morgan Freeman a stern look, and he looks amused by her sternness.
We see by the movements of his body and the melting sternness on his face that he is changing.
I see similarities with Dutch Guild portraits, a very business-oriented genre, but also with the sternness of early US portraiture.
Produced by the pop hitmaker Max Martin, "Bloodline" has rocksteady breeze, electro sternness and some of Grande's most in-the-pocket singing.
Mr. Baxt is an initially imposing presence, but his sternness quickly gives way to a gentle demeanor and a mischievous sense of humor.
Despite the sternness of the new chief of staff, the White House is still engulfed in controversies that are often of the President's own making.
One of the more surreal moments of the evening came as a result, when Duvall instructed Caan to "Use your mic" in pitch-perfect Tom Hagen sternness.
Maybe you're the kind of person who prefers this type of sternness to get moving, but I felt like this gadget nagged me more than it motivated.
The vocal line with its stentorian triads and insistent repetitions would be easy enough to transcribe, but the unhinged sternness of Mr. Eastman's delivery might be hard to replicate.
But that apparent sternness belies a genuine love of teaching and a deep well of patience, two qualities that have prepared her for teaching a college-level course at a school like Woodson.
But when it does finally manage to shake off its sternness, it's a joyful 35 minutes or so — a frustrating tease if you signed up for 124 minutes of dinosaurs, robots, and karate.
Here I would dissent a little from the sternness of Jacobs's pessimism, since I think the Christian humanists that he describes — and their secular and Jewish counterparts — had a little more short-run success than he suggests.
Mr. Iñárritu's virtual reality, or VR, project has a sternness and resolve similar to some of his previous movies, notably the survivalist epic "The Revenant" and the California-Mexico strand of "Babel," which netted a best director prize here in 2006.
But I went into Homecoming feeling a little unsure of how that hero, as winsome as he was, would carry an entire movie; since a lot of his character's appeal in Civil War was that he was able to play off of the stoicism and sternness of the superheroes around him.
"Well, I find a lot of similarities in Master P and our dad..." she says before detailing the two men share a an independent business drive and that they're both "invested in black people, invested in our community and our storytelling..." The now-iconic cover art for Seat was inspired partially by the Mona Lisa's "sternness," according to Solange, who wanted an image that "communicated, through my eyes and my posture, like, "Come and get close.
The Rigorous Fate (, also released as The Sternness of Fate) is a 1985 Argentine drama film directed by Gerardo Vallejo. It was entered into the 14th Moscow International Film Festival.
Tooze, page 22. The sternness with which Goerdeler administered his task as Price Commissioner made him a well-known figure in Germany. However, he later resigned from the DNVP because Alfred Hugenberg was a committed foe of the Brüning government.
In other ways, though, its sternness hampers it." Howard Feinstein of Filmmaker Magazine wrote that "Maidan is gorgeous if stark. It never crosses the line into aestheticizing the revolution, the suffering and brutality that come along with it. Its artfulness stems from obsessive precision.
Under her administration, the school enrollment and facilities grew "with such marvelous rapidity", with new buildings to serve over 500 students, ages 7 through 20. Belcher's approach emphasised high moral purpose and set public service as a priority over private needs; "her rule was one of love, not of fear," recalled one account, "yet her sternness, where sternness was deserved, prevented any abuse of her gentle methods". Belcher helped establish the high school's alumnae organization, the Old Girls' Guild, which held reunions and made charitable contributions in Bedford. She remained as headmistress at Bedford for fifteen years, until her death in 1898 from illness.
19 Apuleius also makes reference to the sternness of his judge's philosophy which is understood to be a reference to Stoicism.Apuleius, Apologia, i. 19 Though Apuleius is clearly trying to flatter his judge, at least some of his attributions were likely true since he was acquitted.
There are two neighbouring villages. "Meesaala" Venkaiah is the head farmer of one village who is high on self- respect and sternness. Bhadraiah, the head farmer of the other village, is also quite confident but with little less property. The alliance of Bhadraiah's daughter Sujatha is fixed with Venkaiah's son Devasimha.
But in spite of the sternness of destiny, in the hearts of her friends and of the whole world Ginette is unforgettable. The memory of her will never die.' Neveu was posthumously awarded the Cross of the Legion d'Honneur. A street is named in her memory in the Montmartre region of Paris.
During 2002, Kentaro Shiga left Sternness to return to Burning and, on October 14, teamed with Kobashi and Kenta to win the One Day 6 Man Tag Tournament, defeating the Sternness trio of Jun Akiyama, Akitoshi Saito and Makoto Hashi in the finals. In March 2003, Kobashi won the GHC Heavyweight Championship, which he held for two full years, before losing it to Takeshi Rikio, who had now left Burning. In July 2004, Kobashi's newest trainee, Go Shiozaki, made his professional wrestling debut as a member of Burning, quickly establishing himself as a top heavyweight prospect. Meanwhile, Kobashi's number one protégé and Burning stablemate, Kenta, rose to the top of Noah's junior heavyweight division, winning the GHC Junior Heavyweight Championship in July 2005.
Having been ill his entire life, Ephraim always received stronger amounts of Deborah's sternness. He lived a solitary childhood, never getting to experience and of the typical joys of youth. His mother always kept him on a strict diet and schedule, which contained nothing of what he wanted to do. As he gets older, Ephraim becomes more and more rebellious.
McGonagall is considered to be a formidable witch who is skilled in many forms of magic, notably transfiguration and spell-casting. McGonagall is a registered Animagus and can transform herself into a tabby cat at will. McGonagall was always held in high respect by her peers and students at Hogwarts and was notable for her sternness and dry sense of humour.
She conceded that La clemenza di Tito had a rebarbative reputation, but suggested that Davis's recording could win some converts to its cause. She judged Janet Baker's Vitellia to be good with reservations. Vocally, Baker showed signs of her advancing years in both her higher notes and her lower. Dramatically, she offered more sternness and less glitter than some people might wish.
The typical culture at one of these conglomerates is highly paternalistic in nature. Much of the environment is defined by the chairman who acts as a "fatherly-figure" to his subordinates. This can be traced back to the infusion of Neo-Confucian values that permeate Korean society. A chaebol head's demeanor towards his employee can be described as "loving" while maintaining "sternness and a sense of responsibility".
Thus, there was considerable trouble during the first months of Fairfax's command, and discipline had to be enforced with unusual sternness. As for the enemy, Oxford was openly contemptuous of "the rebels' new brutish general" and his men, who seemed hardly likely to succeed, where Essex and Waller had failed. But the effect of Parliament having "an army all its own" was soon to be apparent.
He became one of the most renowned Japanese exponents of bird-and-flower (kachō) painting in the Chinese court manner and is especially noted in his precise depictions of quail. His flower pieces were elegant, and given some tender sediment. Mitsuoki's sternness of his older style, never lost its dignity, but gained gentleness and tranquility. The Emperor, nobles and rich families collected and preserved his books.
Cicero, Brutus, 14. His descendants seem not to have shared his disposition; as the historian William Ihne put it, "the family of the Laenates was unfavourably distinguished even among the Romans for their sternness, cruelty, and haughtiness of character." The name is occasionally found as Lenas in some manuscripts of Livy. A number of Popillii are mentioned without a surname, but some of them may have belonged to the same family.
In 806, Tian Ji'an was further given the honorary chancellor designation of Tong Zhongshu Menxia Pingzhangshi ().Zizhi Tongjian, vol. 237. It was said that in Tian's youth, his behavior was curbed in by Princess Jiacheng's sternness, and that while he was not capable, he followed the rites and the laws. After Princess Jiacheng died, however, he lost self-control, and he spent his time on polo, hunting, and pleasure.
Maria and Frieda Gelhorn, recently orphaned identical twin teenage girls, move from Venice to Karnstein in Central Europe to live with their uncle Gustav Weil. Weil is a stern Puritan and leader of the fanatical witch-hunting 'Brotherhood'. Both twins resent their uncle's sternness and one of them, Frieda, looks for a way to escape. Resenting her uncle, she becomes fascinated by the local Count Karnstein, who has the reputation of being "a wicked man".
To "render signal services to mankind" requires greater moral strength than Wilberforce possesses: what is needed is "a severity, a sternness, a self-denial, and a painful sense of duty" that in Wilberforce's case vanish in exchange for a nod of approval from the king or the Prime Minister.Hazlitt 1930, vol. 11, pp. 147–48. Even in Wilberforce's acts of independence from his party's political standpoint, Hazlitt notes a subtle balancing of motives.
The New England magazine wrote of him: Throughout his life, Emmons abstained almost entirely from alcohol, seldom drank tea or coffee, and ate simply and in moderate quantities. He studied from twelve to seventeen hours a day, seldom leaving his study for anything but meals, rest, and his parochial duties. He was described as "a man of strong convictions and an indomitable will, which gave to his character an aspect of sternness, of chilly dignity".
The English Civil War slashed the monies spent on repairs, while the Abbey Church was used to hold prisoners of war and suffered from their vandalism, as well as that of their guards. Most of the metal objects that had survived the Dissolution were also removed and other ornamental parts were damaged in Puritan sternness. Another round of fund-raising in 1681–84 was again spent on the roof, repairing the Presbytery vault.
Stern when sternness > was necessary, yet gentleness was the prevailing ingredient of his royal > nature. He ruled by the divine attribute of love, and if his children feared > him it was not the fear that he would visit punishment upon them, but the > fear that they might displease him. In all family matters he would with > knightly grace defer to his beloved wife, whose word to him was law. Seldom > do we find a happier more perfect home than this one.
Wrangel's insubordination was not counted against him when, in the autumn, he was summoned to Berlin to suppress its riots during the German revolutions of 1848–49. As governor of Berlin and commander-in-chief of Brandenburg (appointments that he held until his death), he proclaimed a state of siege and ejected the Liberal president and the members of the Chamber. Thus, on two occasions in the troubled history of Prussia's revival, Wrangel's uncompromising sternness achieved its object without bloodshed.
According to Virgil Huzum, a poet and Unirea graduate, the school could remember Rașcu "with justified pride." Nevertheless, Rașcu was not happy teaching in Focșani: as Iordan writes, his sternness was not well received by his students, and, when his grading system was challenged by his superiors, he resigned from his position altogether.Iordan, p. 53 Eventually, he relocated to Bucharest, where, from 1923 to 1933, he taught at Șincai Lyceum, and presided over its students' Society for the Study of Romanian Literature.
To Scherer, in part, it owes the retention of the faith. In 1577 he was Court preacher to the Archduke Matthias; he retained the post until 1600. In 1590 he was appointed Rector of the Jesuit College at Vienna; the sternness of his character scarcely fitted him for the office, and he was transferred (1594) to Linz. The story of his being struck blind in the pulpit, after having exclaimed: "If the Catholic Church is not the True Church, may I become blind," is a pure invention.
Dependence on the strength of courage results in > violence. Excessive discipline and sternness in command result in cruelty. > When one has all five virtues together, each appropriate to its function, > then one can be a leader. — Jia Lin, in commentary on Sun Tzu, Art of WarThe > Art of War: Complete Texts and Commentaries (2003) 44, translated by Thomas > Cleary Machiavelli's The Prince, written in the early-16th century, provided a manual for rulers ("princes" or "tyrants" in Machiavelli's terminology) to gain and keep power.
Gehazi was the servant of the prophet Elisha. He appears in connection with the history of the Shunammite woman and her son; and of Naaman the Syrian. On the latter occasion, Gehazi, overcome with avarice, obtained in the prophet's name two talents of silver and two changes of garments from Naaman. Consequently, he was guilty of duplicity and dishonesty of conduct, causing Elisha to denounce his crime with righteous sternness, and determine that "the leprosy of Naaman would cleave to him and his descendants for ever".
He was unpretentious in manner, and at Melbourne he at first astonished some people by smoking a pipe and going on his walks accompanied by a bulldog. He was thoroughly broad-minded and interested in current events, with a keen eye for humbug and priggishness. His sternness of feature and apparent coldness concealed from those who did not know him his great kindness of heart and strength of feeling. He was a tremendous worker and student, he had a clear logical mind, a sense of humour, great sincerity, and a natural gift of eloquence.
The goddess embodied these qualities for her worshippers. She was commonly worshipped by imperial Roman soldiers, particularly those who lived along the borders of the Roman Empire;Paul Erdkamp, A Companion to the Roman Army, 2007, Blackwell Publishing, 600 pages altars to her have been found in Great Britain and North Africa. The fort of Cilurnum along Hadrian's Wall was dedicated to the goddess Disciplina, as witnessed by an extant dedicatory inscription on a stone altar found in 1978."The epigraphy of Cilurnum" Her chief virtues were frugalitas, severitas and fidelis—frugality, sternness, and faithfulness.
Joseph Ritson was subsequently the leading figure in Primitive > Methodism in West Allen, and he gave to the Connexion one of its foremost > ministers of the present time. Joseph commenced business at Ninebanks as > builder and joiner, built up a prosperous trade, and was known and trusted > all round as a man of character and probity. Frank, manly, free from cant, > inclined to sternness and severity, yet having the heart of a child, his > worldly success never cooled his devotion in the Lord’s service, and a > revival was his joy.
Thucydides explained that the purpose of conquering Melos was to demonstrate the strength and sternness of Athens so as to discourage its island territories from defecting. Whether it was effective at discouraging rebellion is uncertain. Just a few years after the conquest of Melos, Athens suffered a devastating defeat in a military expedition to Sicily, after which rebellions happened throughout the empire. Whether Melos was truly neutral is sometimes debated by scholars. Thucydides wrote that after the raid by Nicias in 426 BC, the Melians assumed "an attitude of open hostility",Thucydides.
I. M. Rașcu (most common rendition of Ion Rașcu; – 1971) was a Romanian poet of Symbolist verse, cultural promoter, comparatist, and schoolteacher. He is remembered for his participation in the Romanian Symbolist movement: a founder and co-editor, with Alfred Hefter-Hidalgo, of Versuri și Proză magazine, he became one of the leading Symbolist figures in his native city of Iași before 1914. In later years, he lived more discreetly as a scholar and educationist, earning both praise and opprobrium for his sternness and erudition. A Catholic convert and devotional writer, Rașcu spent several years in France.
They were premiered in New York at Alice Tully Hall on 25 November 1989, Piazzolla having flown to New York to play with the quartet for the premiere and the subsequent recordings, which were done in a three-hour session at the Power Station in Manhattan. Harrington remarked that this was the shortest recording session they had ever done, and the quartet noted a "centered sternness" in Piazzolla: according to Harrington, "he pulled the music out of Kronos."Azzi, Le Grand Tango, 271–272. The session with the Kronos Quartet proved to be his last studio recording:Azzi, Le Grand Tango, 271, 288.
Turning again to the parlements, the king found that they were inclined to continue the issues that had been raised in the Assembly of Notables. Their proper legal function, besides giving advice to the king, was only to register, or record, his edicts as law, a matter of simple obedience, which the king's antecessors had been able to command, sometimes by sternness, threats, and losses of temper. Unless registered, the edicts were not lawful. On 6 July 1787, Loménie forwarded the Subvention Territoriale and another tax, the Edit du Timbre, or "Stamp Act," based on the American model, for registration.
He was sent out to Manila in 1852 as governor-general of the Philippine Islands. In April 1854 he crushed with much sternness a formidable insurrection and carried out many useful reforms. On his return to Spain he married the Countess of Santa Isabel, and commanded the reserves in the Peninsula during the war with Morocco. He refused the war portfolio twice offered him by Marshals O'Donnell and Narvaez and in 1864 was briefly president of government (prime minister) at the head of a cabinet of conservative-liberal Moderates; his government lasted but a few days.
He had one of those happy tempers which > nothing can ruffle, without a grain of pride, sternness or resentment in his > nature. Ready to laugh with every body and at every thing, he poured out wit > in torrents; and it was so much the worse for truth if ever truth stood in > wit's way.Lady Louisa Stuart, Memoire of Frances, Lady Dougles, at page 37; > Edinburgh and London, Scottish Academic Press, 1985 The American towns of Townsend, Massachusetts and Townshend, Vermont were founded and named after Charles Townshend in 1732 and 1753, respectively. Raynham, Massachusetts was also named after him.
18th-century engraving of Coriolanus Act V, Scene III Hazlitt's focus in the essay on Coriolanus is less on the various characters of Shakespeare's tragedy than on the fundamental moral and political principles behind their actions. For Hazlitt, this play showed in action the concepts behind political writings of his own day, such as Edmund Burke's Reflections on the Revolution in France and Thomas Paine's Rights of Man.Hazlitt 1818, p. 69. The character of Coriolanus is a type of the aristocratic hero, though presented as a well- rounded individual, with a "pride" consisting of "inflexible sternness of will", a "love of reputation" and "glory", and a "contempt of popular opinion".
Before 1934, the State of the Union was usually given before the New Year, and between 1801 and 1912 the message was presented as a lengthy, written report to the U.S. Congress. See Peters, "State of the Union Messages" Cleveland's report pointed out that the United States was interested in good relations with China. He stated, "All of the power of this government should be exhorted to maintain the amplest good faith towards China in the treatment of these men, and the inflexible sternness of the law ... must be insisted upon ... race prejudice is the chief factor to originating these disturbances".The New York Times, "The Message to Congress".
Rhodes wrote a letter to Mississippi Governor John J. Pettus on March 12, 1863 on behalf of Mr. Fisher. “My Dear Sir,” he began, “As an old friend I venture to invoke your services on behalf of my father-in-law Mr. Sam’l C. Fisher who is a fugitive from New Orleans where he resided and who is by the chance of war cut off from all of his resources. He has no funds or resources that he can now command and the necessity of procuring employment presses upon him with a sternness that admits of neither delay or escape. I ask you to find some employment for him as a favor I can never forget.
Darnborough had seemed set to become a major star, but she effectively retired from dancing after her marriage. She appeared not to have regretted her decision and, in old age, recalled both the relatively poor pay at Vic-Wells and the sternness of de Valois, who would "stamp her stick furiously" and had once castigated her for the untidiness of her dressing table. The Mathiesons moved into an old farmhouse near Alexander Korda's Denham studios in Buckinghamshire, where Muir Mathieson worked for London Films. They had four children, Muirne, Niall, Shuna and Fiona,Notice in The Times, 4 November 2010 the youngest of whom, the actress Fiona Mathieson (1951–87), played Clarrie Grundy in the radio serial The Archers.
Born into a wealthy, landed family at Mount Pleasant, outside of Launceston, Tasmania, Cynthia Reed's childhood and adolescence was materially secure, but she found the evangelical Christianity and patriarchal sternness of her family life highly disturbing. Themes of childhood alienation are threaded through her fiction, informed by her experience of psychoanalysis and reading of Freudian theory and textbooks. After some years as a boarder at the Hermitage Girls' School, Geelong she lived with her sister Dr Margaret Reed in Melbourne. An affair with orchestral conductor Bernard Heinze during the late 1920s expanded her cultural and intellectual milieu, and she moved in a group of avant garde artists and patrons in Melbourne centred around her brother John Reed.
Because her funeral rituals are not concluded properly, she becomes a "hungry ghost", who wanders far beyond the inner world of women that constrained her in her youth. In the process, she encounters a number of women writers who lament the difficulty of getting their voices heard in a male- dominated world. From her dead grandmother, she learns many painful details about her family's past as the Qing Dynasty violently replaced the Ming Dynasty, details later amplified by Peony's mother. Peony comes to learn about the courage and extreme suffering both older women experienced during the fighting and that the sternness her mother treated her with as a girl was only her attempt to protect her daughter from the evils of the outside world.
Kenta Kobashi, leader of the first two incarnations of Burning Following the jump to Noah, the original Burning split up and instead Kobashi took rookie wrestlers Kenta and Takeshi Rikio under his wing, while also forming new partnerships with veterans Tamon Honda and Tsuyoshi Kikuchi, forming the second incarnation of Burning. However, this version of Burning got off to a slow start, when Kobashi was forced to undergo surgeries on both his elbow and knees in early 2001. He eventually returned to the ring in February 2002, but during his return match tore his anterior cruciate ligament, which sidelined him for further five months. With his injuries behind for now, Kobashi led Burning to a storyline rivalry with former partner Jun Akiyama's new stable, Sternness.
Some of his attitudes were more conservative, however: he was very opposed to divorce and approved of the excommunication of those who married others subsequent to divorcing, writing that in his own experience 'I had not found that God's love was marked by the removal of all penalties for my actions'. This is a good illustration that, however stern Ward might seem to others, it arose from austerity and sternness towards himself. On the other hand, Norman Goodacre recalled that, while waiting to make his confession to Ward, he would sometimes hear 'peals of laughter' from the priest and the previous penitent. Ward always stressed he was not a psychologist, but made use of some psychological techniques in his spiritual counselling: he always encouraged his penitents to examine their fears as well as their sins.
He continued to rule the O.D. Connected with a stern but fair hand, relying on the Floating Outfit to carry out his wishes and often sending them to the aid of friends or relatives who had need of their talents. Despite his sternness, Hardin has a soft spot for his granddaughter Betty Hardin, and occasionally shows a keen humour and generosity to the young men he normally treats severely, such as when, having scolded Red Blaze for his gaudy neckwear, Hardin rewards him for a job well done with a still more outlandish silk bandana that he had bought for himself as a young man ("Cousin Red's Big Chance" in The Hard Riders). Although formerly having been in arms against Mexico, Hardin retains many important friends south of the border, including even one (Don Ruiz Villaneuva, in The Peacemakers) who fought on the Mexican side at the siege of the Alamo. His eventual death is reported at the conclusion of Doc Leroy M. D..
Writing for The Guardian, Alexis Petridis said: > ... for all its easiness on the ear, – and there are moments when listening > Take Me to the Alley feels like being mugged by a syrup sponge pudding – > there’s something weirdly uncompromising about Porter’s music. He doesn’t > bother with glossy production: Take Me to the Alley sounds fantastic, but > that’s down to the warm spontaneity of an album that seems to have been > recorded in six days. Nor does he dabble in radio-friendly pop covers – no > scat-singing interpreter of the Coldplay songbook he. His own compositions > proudly display his gospel roots – not the first genre you’d think of > flaunting were you desperate for mainstream success. The title track offers > up a parable about the second coming of Christ, its sternness at odds with > the pacific piano playing and Alicia Olatuja’s pillowy backing vocals; "In > Heaven" undercuts the small hours loveliness of its muted trumpet with a > lyric by Porter’s cousin about death and redemption.
In this way, Kishi maintained that once the Japanese proved that they were the ones with the power, the dog-like Chinese would come to be naturally obedient to their Japanese masters, and as such the Japanese had to behave with a great deal of sternness to prove that they were the masters. Kishi, when speaking in private, always used the term "Manchū" to refer to Manchukuo, instead of "Manchūkoku", which reflected his viewpoint that Manchukuo was not a state, but rather just a region rich in resources and 34 million people to be used for Japan's benefit. In Kishi's eyes, Manchukuo and its people were literally just resources to be exploited by Japan, and he never made the pretense in private that maintaining Japanese rule was good for the people of Manchukuo. Alongside the exploitation of men as slave workers went the exploitation of women as sex slaves, as women were forced into becoming "comfort women" as sexual slavery in the Imperial Army and Navy was called.
He teamed with Scorpio and Vader at the last event for Noah's Voyage Navigation in November facing Takao Omori, Yoshihiro Takayama and Satoru Asako at Korakuen Hall on November 16. At the Differ Ariake during the next few weeks, he and Vader would team against Akira Taue and Jun Izumida and with Makoto Hashi against Tamon Honda and Masao Inoue. On February 17, 2002, Slinger and Scorpio lost to Yoshinari Ogawa and Naoki Sano when Slinger was pinned by Ogawa at Budokan Hall with 16,500 in attendance. On September 7, Slinger teamed with IZU, Scorpio and Vader to defeat Kenta Kobashi, Kentaro Shiga, Daisuke Ikeda and Muhammad Yone at Noah's Navigation Over the Date Line after a near-20 minute match. At the 2003 Navigation Over the Date Line, Slinger and Masashi Aoyagi beat Haruka Eigen and Kishin Kawabata at Budokan Hall when Slinger pinned Eigen on September 12, 2003. On September 14, Slinger participated in a one-night 6-man tag team tournament at the sold-out Hakata Star Lanes in which he joined with Maxx Justice and Superstar Steve as Team Sternness to advance to the finals against Team Burning (Akira Taue, Yoshinobu Kanemaru & Tsuyoshi Kikuchi).
By this doctrine, man had been converted into the warrior, > and clothed with sternness, and those other kindred qualities, which in > common estimation belong to his character as a man; whilst woman has been > taught to lean upon an arm of flesh, to sit as a doll arrayed in "gold, and > pearls, and costly array," to be admired for her personal charms, and > caressed and humored like a spoiled child, or converted into a mere drudge > to suit the convenience of her lord and master. Thus have all the > diversified relations of life been filled with "confusion and every evil > work." This principle has given to man a charter for the exercise of tyranny > and selfishness, pride and arrogance, lust and brutal violence. It has > robbed woman of essential rights, the right to think and speak and act on > all great moral questions, just as men think and speak and act; the right to > share their responsibilities, perils and toils; the right to fulfill the > great end of her being, as a moral, intellectual and immortal creature, and > of glorifying god in her body and her spirit which are His.

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