Word: mutualization
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...drew an ideal picture of a world with law substituted for brute force, where sanity, reason, and counsel prevail, and where "all nations, big and small, unite into agreements regarding their common welfare on the basis of mutual understanding, conciliation, and cooperation". For the accomplishment of this, the speaker pointed out, the European countries must sink nationalism in internationalism, must demobilize not only their armies but also their jealousies and hatreds, "and tear down all trade restrictions, tariff walls, and passport regulations...
...author of this tract, do say: Since Batando and Aquinca hold each other in mutual contempt, there are those that cry aloud: "Let us not have this spirit of hostility--are we not brethren one to another? Let Aquinca open his heart to Batando and Batando to Aquinca and there will be an end of littleness; yea, such a joyous exchange of fellowship there will be that we will return to the state of our ancestors, when differences between one man and another were unknown...
...Engineering Society will hold a smoker at Pierce 110 tomorrow at 8 o'clock. Mr. D. S. Beyer, Chief Engineer of the Liberty Mutual Life Insurance Co. of Boston, will speak on "The Safety Engineer and Modern Industry". The talk will be illustrated with motion pictures, while refreshments and smokes will be served after the lecture. Everyone interested is invited to attend...
...would be offered the opportunity of being detailed to West Point to give courses there for a year or two years at a time, and likewise professors from West Point going in exchange to college outside of West point I think such an arrangement would prove a very great mutual advantage in many ways...
...this reason the Chinese have refused to accept Japan's proposal to rash a decision by "direct negotiations". Such a controversy was necessarily a hindrance to any program towards mutual understanding at the Conference. Fortunately both China and Japan accepted the "got offices" of Mr. Hughes and Mr. Balfour in arranging a series of discussions of the matter in the presence of the American and British "observers". At the first of the conversations, the Japanese spokesman took advantage of the occasion in his speech of thanks to Mr. Hughes and Mr. Baleful to refer to the meetings as "direct negotiations...