Word: utmost
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...time of the year its only possible value is as a souvenir. The Catalogue and the Directory have already performed whatever services were necessary; the Register comes out with a great deal of exceedingly interesting information with which everyone is now familiar, but which would have been of the utmost importance in November. And this fardiness of the Register is not a new thing; it may almost be called a habit...
Wagner died in Venice, and there ensued that fantastic nocturnal carrying of his body by Italian enthusiasts. After his death, the Baireuth Festivals continued and pilgrims from all over the world flocked to them yearly. Their purpose was to perform the Wagnerian works with the utmost perfection, and in complete accordance with the usages that Wagner had laid down with great detail. Whether in the later years of their flourishing they were the best Wagnerian performances in the world may be greatly doubted...
Four of the team A men have signed up for the state championship tournament which starts today. P. W. Dixon '25, the University captain, is a favorite for the title and is expected to push C. C. Peabody, the present champion, to the utmost. The Harvard man has not lost a match this year in the tournament just completed, having defeated Howe of the Union Boat Club, 3-1, Bray of Newton Centre, 3-2, Powers of B. A. A., 3-0, Peabody of the Tennis and Racquet Club, 3-1, Wakefield of the Lincoln's Inn Society...
...Princeton team, however, is quite strong enough to force the University to its utmost, without the assistance of any benevolent jinx. In spite of the unfortunate injury of Captain Stout, which incapacitates him for the rest of the season, the reorganized Tigers gave the powerful Yale sextette a hard battle last Saturday, and may be relied upon to perform tonight in the same fashion...
...such peculiarly significant. The League has never been submitted to the nation on its own merits, stripped of party sponsorship and political personalities. In 1920, there was a choice of Mr. Cox and his League, or Mr. Harding and any other foreign policy, and the personalities had the utmost importance in the final decision. Ever since the League was visualized by Mr. Wilson, it has labored under the disadvantage of Democratic ownership. But here is the Bok Plan, unattached politically or personally; actually the League on its own at last...