Word: prevailingly
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...Chinese People's Republic." He had liberal praise for Red China's friendship and aims, denunciation for the "criminal gang of Chiang Kai-shek that was expelled from China"; he said that the U.S. "must withdraw" all its forces from the Formosa Strait before peace can prevail. But when it came to aligning Russia with Peking's unqualified vow to "liberate" Formosa, Molotov was conspicuously noncommital...
Thank you very much for your editorial on Phillips Brooks House--one of the very best editorials, I feel, I have seen in the CRIMSON in the past several years. I think it's rare, in an area where usually only emotions prevail, to find such an understanding of issues, a reasoned approach, and so quiet and lucid an analysis. Henry Landau '54 1G (PBHA President...
...copies of their "peace and prosperity" slogan to adopt a new one before the congressional elections are held in November. But time is running out, and the factors of tension and explosiveness that make for sudden war are not being erased by the attitude of passivity which seems to prevail in official quarters-including Denver, where the fishing and the golfing have been pleasant-as if peace is attainable by merely wishing that the bad men of the world would just go away...
...Congress, Author William (A Fable) Faulkner decided to sightsee among the well-known Brazilian tourist spots, ended up in the São Paulo snake farm with a full-grown snake coiled around his neck. Calm in the knowledge that, as he has written, "man and his folly . . . will prevail," the Mississippi philosopher declared: "I'm not afraid of snakes. Man is man's most dangerous enemy." Then back to its keeper he handed the snake, which-on close inspection-turned out to be a thoroughly harmless South American species of coral snake...
...Fable, by William Faulkner. The Nobel Prizewinner unveils a World War I passion play with a corporal as Christ, but veils his deeper meanings except to suggest that "man and his folly . . . will prevail" (TIME...