Word: gers
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...Wagner" and, by inheritance, wears the Wagnerian tradition. He is said to have tried his hand at politics, to have taken some part (see Page 11) in the present Royalist movement in Germany, but here too he gained no great prominence. His mother, Cosima, remains in Ger- many, dreaming over her memories, and striving, like her son, to revivify the Wagnerian Festivals of Baireuth, which were ruined by the War. These festivals were instituted with enormous efforts by Wagner himself, and were the living embodiment of the strange worship that attended him in his later years. They became a cult...
...interview at The Hague, where he was representing the Ger man League of Nations Society* at the meeting of the International Confederation of League of Nations Societies, Count von Bernstorff (German Ambassador to the U. S. before and during the first two and a half years of the War) said that the League idea was growing in Germany and that its machinery would be necessary to unravel the reparations tangle...
...Nassau will have a strong kicker, one of the best in the east. Newspaper critic's particularly critized the kicking of the Orange and Black in the last week's game with Johns Hopkins. Kicks were short and gotten off so late that they were frequently blocked. But Van Ger-big's leg will eliminate this difficulty in todays game...
...second session was marked by a noticeable improvement in the Tiger shooting and the corresponding spectacular performances of Bigelow. Van Ger- big and Stout opened the period by carrying the puck down the ice to a close position in the left lane, but the Crimson goal made a neat stop. Several other shots quickly followed, but after a while Walker and Larocque were able to relieve the situation by making a short and ineffective sally to the Princeton end of the rink. At this point the game speeded up, with both teams striving for the aggressive. For a moment...
...Hoover, and Wiekersham" as against "The Democratic hegemony of Taggart, Nugent and Tamany Hall". It would be closer to the truth, the of course detrimental to your argument, to say that you believe that Harding, indorsed by Johnson, Borah, Lodges, Moses, Viereck, and other radical politicians and admittedly pro-Ger- man schemers, will change not only his opposition to any League of Nations, but also the opinion of the leading nations of the world regarding the present League, and will be able to bring about peace in the world, after his election; while Cox, who favors the League, will...