Word: virtualization
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...during the framing of the peace treaty. Think how, while France is seeking to establish peace, she has a dagger pointing within a few centimeters of her heart and is asking only that this dagger be removed.' " He referred to the strong position which ex-Crown Prince Rupprecht, "virtual King of Bavaria" is in, asked: "Have we not treated too lightly the return of the Crown Prince (Friedrich Wilhelm, son of the ex-Kaiser?", accused Germany of not having even begun moral disarmament. But France, he said, was not discouraged...
...British Government insisted that neither the League not any organization formed under the covenant could regulate affairs between England and other parts of the British Empire. The treaty, nevertheless, remains registered, and it seems likely that England has decided to acquiesce in the technical, as well as in the virtual independence of her dominions...
...that the Nationalists would refrain from attacking the Plan during the elections. ¶An incident only faintly connected with the elections came to light when 27 Bavarian Generals declared a social boycott against ex-First Quartermaster General Erich von Ludendorff because the latter declared that ex-Crown Prince Rupprecht, virtual King of Bavaria, had (TIME, Nov. 19, 1923). Further, he had demanded that the ex-Crown Prince should appear before a court of honor to defend himself. The Bavarian Generals demanded an apology and were said to have expected challenges to duels. General von Ludendorff has ever preserved...
Untaught by the burst of protest against Defense Day, President Coolidge has lent his support to a nearly identical program. Unchastened by the virtual fiasco of last September's celebration, he has endorsed in a letter whose enthusiasm is matched only by its length the proposed celebration of today as Navy Day. But the militaristic basis of the plan he concealed beneath a quite proper emphasis upon the peaceful achievements of the naval forces in exploration, charting, assisting commerce, mapping currents and winds; in sum, making the seas less the dreaded playground of unfamiliar forces...
...Baker, H. T. Parker, Walter Hampden and other interpreters of the drama, the realistic studies of life in the gymnasium, and the seductive portrait of a pre-Raphaelite pet called Gladys cannot be impaired in value by the cryptic remarks placed under them, remarks which are preferable to the virtual spirit of the club rather than to any sense of humour...