Word: dieingly
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...Lotus pond The image of the great Buddha stands His gaze fixed far beyond". Played by the Composer Juba Dance, Natheniel Dett W. T. Ames '24 Gray Day, P. G. Clapp '09. Silhouette, C. K. McKinley '17 D. T. Gammons '18 and G. W. Woodworth '24 Warum sind denn die Rosen so blass, R. A. Sweet '08 The Cherry Tree, D. N. Tweedy '12 The Wind, D. N. Tweedy '12 The Prayer, George Newell Sp. Song Is So Old, Charles Repper '10 Ebb on with Me, M. M. Smith '20 J. F. Lautner '21, George Newell...
...Die beiden Grenadiere...
...convincing analogy. Germany is the conspicuous recent example, but there are plenty of others. Japan, for instance, lived many centuries in external peace, but, since acquiring the "protection" of a modern army and a militarist frame of mind, has engaged in three foreign wars since 1894. Men die and a nation suffers in a war of aggression, even a winning war, just as surely as in a war of defence. Ideals suffer more...
Anent Mark Hanna: "He damned Roosevelt and said: 'I told William McKinley it was a mistake to nominate that wild man at Philadelphia. I asked him if he realized what would happen if he should die. Now, look, that damned cowboy is President of the United States.' . . . He came to my seat at the other end of the car and said: 'That damned cowboy wants me to take supper with him, alone. Damn him!' I said: 'Mark, you are acting like a child. Go and meet him half...
Since most of the shop unions have settled with the roads to their own disadvantage, the President's remarks look like a rebuke to the die-hard unions. On the other hand, the letter was addressed to a union leader and enclosed an autographed photograph to be used in a drive for strike relief funds, which argues that Mr. Harding meant to rebuke the die-hard roads. The press has interpreted the letter according to its union or anti-union bias...