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...upshot of this war is inconclusive the whole world will be preparing for another. During any temporary truce men of science in all countries will devote much of their thought to making engines more destructive and more deadly for the next struggle which will be well nigh a war of extermination...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: "PEACE DELUSIVE UNLESS MILITARISM IS DESTROYED" | 5/17/1918 | See Source »

These are minor points of interest. As to the upshot, we can only hope that General Foch will be successful and that our troops will get the full share of the fighting we know they are thirsting...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: SERIOUS SITUATION CONTINUES | 4/5/1918 | See Source »

...deals not so much with culture as with the basis for culture that can be laid by a college or university, for culture, like all education, must continue through life. All we can do as teachers is to lay the best foundation for it that we can, and the upshot of the argument here presented is comprised in the old adage that the true basis for culture is to know a little of everything and everything of something. While we may admit that this is the object to be sought, sharp differences of opinion exist, and will remain, in regard...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: STATUS OF PROFESSIONAL EDUCATION DEFINED | 10/6/1915 | See Source »

...distinguished, He has no difficulty in arousing and holding the interest of the reader. Regarded simply as an account of the mysterious excesses of occultism and of the nature of its votaries, his essay is decidedly effective. But as an argument, which it apparently sets out to be, its upshot is not quite clear. It was hardly necessary to prove that "Satanism" still survives, though some facts cited by Mr. Wright may not be generally familiar. Certainly the opinion, condemned in the opening paragraph, that "interest in the more transcendental aspects of life" belongs to "the deluded and the unhealthy...

Author: By F. N. Robinson., | Title: REVIEW OF MONTHLY | 11/2/1912 | See Source »

...every disputed question, there is a preference and somewhere a decided advantage. Of course this implies also the presence of a disadvantage. To counterbalance one against the other, and to strike the juste milieu, will be the aim of the different managements, and we anticipate that the upshot of the whole matter will be satisfactory to all concerned...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Yale Coming Round. | 3/9/1887 | See Source »

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