Word: fatales
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...their affairs, and yet towards them are coming swiftly changes which will revolutionize for good or ill not only the whole economic structure of the world but the social habits and moral outlook of every family. Only the Communists have a plan and a gospel. It is a plan fatal to personal freedom and a gospel founded upon hate." Optimist Churchill may give other optimists (including himself) food for thought when he admits that if he had a second chance at life. "I have no doubt that I do not wish to live it over again...
...than commonly supposed. Immunity to it is high in dogs and humans. The Pasteur treatment within five days of being bitten is highly effective protection. Detection of rabies in its early stages is difficult. The rabid dog is infectious a week before any symptoms appear. As its illness (always fatal to the dog) comes on, it will first seem melancholy, extra affectionate, sexually excited, or uneasy and inclined to seek solitude. It is apt to gather up straw, thread, bits of wood and trash. It will lick cold objects and other animals, but not be disposed to bite. There...
Contrary to the report made in yesterday's CRIMSON the Adams House Christmas dinner will be held Thursday, December 15, at 6.15 o'clock. The CRIMSON also regrets that the name of H. D. Wille 1G, was omitted from the number of those in the meledrama, "The Fatal Nocklace...
...there is the dissipated motion picture actor, living on dreams of the past played in a heroic manner by Conway Tearle; there is Paula Jordan, beautiful daughter, smitten by an unfortunate love for the star. All the guests who are invited have unfortunate dealings with one another before the fatal night. An elaborate suicide by gas, the ruin of Jordan's fortune, the estrangement of Packard and his wife, the detection of an affair between Mrs. Packard and Dr. Talbot lead up to the grand anticlimax--the Forncliffes cannot attend the dinner in their honor...
...lubricate the wheels of trade. Perhaps the writer is a trifle optimistic; universal benefit can come only through universal understanding and sacrifice. Certainly the most encouraging single factor of the problem, however, is that the average business man has seen the lesson of the past three years and the fatal consequences of the slogan "high tariffs mean high wages." Before international confidence must come individual understanding of the forces involved...