Word: conflictingly
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...other half lives--that is, the people on the less fashionable side of the railroad tracks. The absence of personal apostrophes to "Wystan" and "Rex"--W. H. Auden and R. E. Warner--constitutes a gain in intelligibility, though even the shorter poems in the volume, such as "The Conflict" and "In me Two Worlds," which state the problems of the group almost as nicely as any prose manifesto, still want something in appeal to the moiling masses. It would be really a pity if Day Lewis and his colleagues turn out to be Walt Whitmans, rejected by the people whom...
...Arthur E. Morgan, teacherish chairman of TVA, called by the committee, explained: "We bought the land so we could come into their plans and work out with them a unified program. It was done merely so we could cooperate with them rather than work in conflict with them...
...conflict had engaged...
...date several volumes have been published by the Institute, many of them having been written by members of the Harvard Law School Faculty, including "The Law of the Conflict of Laws" by Joseph H. Beale '82, Royall Professor of Law; "The Law of Contracts" by Samuel Williston '82, Dane Professor of Law; "The Law of Agency" by Professor Scavey; and "The Law of Torts" by Francis H. Bohlen, professor at the University of Pennsylvania and a former member of the Harvard Law School Faculty...
...carried to its ultimate conclusion, will be a far greater factor in maintaining peace than appears on the surface. The old system of turning the entire country over to the military staff at the first sign of storm clouds was an enormous factor in preventing the localization of the conflict in 1914. When two mobilized armies glare at each other across an open frontier, diplomats might better go golfing than try to arbitrate...