Word: successful
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...when we might be spending it in learning and spreading lessons of peace. Then, when the time comes for us to talk to the world of plans for perpetual peace, if we fail to accomplish our high aims, at least we shall have given ourselves every opportunity for success. And then, if we do fail, while Europe is rearing new sons to fight her coming battles, there will be time enough for us to prepare to defend ourselves against them. J. GARFIELD...
...Allen made a charming princess and with Paul Blackmur, the Robber Chief, carried off the vocal honors. F. F. Munroe, as Ichabod Gottem, played the comedy role with great success and the work of J. W. D. Seymour, the villain was meritorious...
These conferences have three main objects in view. First, to inform men intending to become lawyers about the demands of the profession, what qualities tend toward success, and what difficulty, expense, and constancy of purpose a thorough training entails; second, to outline the undergraduate course of study most desirable as preparation for work in the Law School; and third, to enable prospective candidates to meet Law School men, and discuss with them the various phases of the work of training for the profession...
...keeping of both our own nation and the world from another such disaster. But the paramount lesson of this war is not the need of attempting to insure for victory in the event of war; we must insure against war itself. The road to be travelled is long; complete success must depend on the development of international law and political unity in some form, and on the universal recognition of the absolute futility of war for securing under modern conditions any economic or moral advantage. The leaders in both lines of progress should be drawn from the most intelligent classes...
...comedy overdone--are indeed preferable to the usual run of undergraduate smartness and veneer. At the close--beautiful as one finds little Rosalie's roguish kiss--it seems better that the boy should have worshipped from afar unappreciated, as must be so often the case with his like. The success of "Rosalie" once more enforces the lesson to portray the life you know: even "Malbrouck," fancifully conceived and tastefully executed, lacks reality beside it. The author of "Malbrouck" to conclude might do well to excise adjectives especially when, as too often, they run in pairs