Word: mutualization
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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This realism, amounting in the case of rulers at least to pessimism certainly has its disadvantages internally, it can hardly result in mutual confidence and loyalty, and "distrust" might be called the key to Italian history. Almost as truly might "sentiment" be called the key to English and American history. One must remember that appearances are deceiving. If one wants proof, one should turn not to the things which a nation says of itself--but to the reasoning with which its politicians away the populace or to the philosophy of its great men. One finds such contrasts as Lincoln...
...significant that the action comes with the mutual approval of both athletic committees who agree that the long trip involved and that the time consumed makes such contests not the most beneficial thing the freshmen might be doing. That attitude is a hopeful sign, especially when taken by the athletic committees themselves who have it directly in their power to say how often and how far the teams shall or shall not go. The attitude is one of weighing the true value, or rather lack of it, in such distant contests. If more athletic committees could be started along this...
...Princeton Freshman teams has been erased from the schedule just drawn up for the Class of 1928 was confirmed by Mr. F. W. Moore '92, graduate treasurer of the Harvard Athletic Association yesterday afternoon in the offices of the H. A. A. The cancellation was effected, he said by mutual agreement of the Associations of the two Universities, and concerns not only Freshman football games, but all Freshman athletic contests which involve trips between Cambridge and Princeton...
...expressed in words the unarticulated and perhaps unconscious theory behind every enterprise which brings different nationalities together on the athletic field. He has gone even further, by proposing to create from sport the cement with which the war-torn peoples of the world may again be bound together in mutual respect and confidence...
...theory is practicable, however, Captain Creed has at least made an excellent beginning, in attempting to further mutual understanding on the part of Great Britain and the United States. If world affairs are to be set in anything like proper order in the near future, a prerequisite is Anglo-American co-operation. The chances that this can be brought about through international sport are far greater between two countries whose national psychology and standards of judgment are so closely related, than between peoples whose points of similarity and consequent opportunities for sympathetic appreciation are less numerous and more fundamentally limited...