Word: il
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...Hennessey IL, member of last year's relay team, beat G. F. Bennett 33 to the tape in the century sprint, with a time of 10 3-5 seconds. Other graduate wins were in the field events; B. B. Smith IG.Ed., former Oxford vaulter who has been practicing with the track squad on Soldiers Field during the season, tied for first place with H. M. Howe '34, who was aided with a two-foot handicap; a 4-inch booster gave G. W. Larsen 2G a height of 6 ft., 1 1-2 in. in the high jump...
...forwards are as follows: R. B. Leman '32, W. M. Osborne '34, G. A. Reilly IL. G. R. White IG B. S. A. Hokanson '33, S. M. Wheeler '32, M. B. Graves '32, D. C. Lssh '31, I. L. Oppenheimer '34, and F. A. Gilbert...
...themselves they defy solution. Bismarck could unify and control Germany by outwitting Napoleon III, but no man today can lay out a course for himself and hope to outwit circumstance. To elaborate this point the author cites the case of Mussolini in Italy. His contention is that if Il Duce had lived in the last century his tremendous ability coupled with the country's military strength would have allowed them to assume the leadership of Europe. Today, however, the problem presented by industry and economics prevents him from making any warlike gestures. One man is not capable of controlling...
...Peace has been the constant object of Il Duce's policy: a political, social and economic peace among citizens, classes and groups, a religious peace and a peace among nations and states; a loyal and not a deceitful peace; an operating and not a static peace because it is aimed at preserving men and nations; a peace founded on truth. . . . [The agreement] represents a victory for no particular nation, but a victory for all the nations, a victory for equity and good sense, which is no less important in the relations between na- tions as in the relations between individuals...
Odds-on bets on the subject of the fiery dictator's drama would probably not disappoint their backer. "Campo di Maggio," Il Duce's brain-child, is being given in Hungary as "The Hundred Days." That Mussolini's favorite hero, the Little Corporal, will hold the center of the stage is not to be doubted. The choice of subject has its advantages. If the artistic merits of the play should prove incapable of raising it above the waters of Lethe, it will at all events be kept above the waves by half a dozen lines in the bibliography of works...