Word: whole
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...also appealed to those present. He emphasized strongly the disastrous results of indifference to our present needs and quoted the instance of the Brandenbergs to prove his statements. "You read the daily papers now with the accounts of what our boys are doing down on the border and the whole thing seems to be one continuous, serial bellyache. I don't know whether these stories are all true or not, but if even a portion of them are true, it only goes to show that even the training those boys have had isn't enough. You must go into this...
...statement of opinion by the Transcript that Russell ought to forget his principles and muzzle their expression at the very moment when they are most needed over the whole world, and when their truth is most clearly manifested is highly unbecoming to an American newspaper; and the reproduction in the CRIMSON of such views, unaccompanied by their repudiation, is much to be regretted. W. B. SOUTHWORTH...
...course there are marital complications; there couldn't be a musical show without them. But the complications are cleverly handled and even the introduction of the charming musical numbers causes no hesitation in the swift procedure of the whole...
...movements can be strictly observed, is by no means the spy or marplot which these prohibitions might be taken to indicate, He is merely so much the philosopher that he cannot take a national view of the questions involved in the war. Like Woodrow Wilson, he regards the whole world as mad, with one nation as much to blame as another for the general outbreak of insanity. This being, apparently, his view, Mr. Russell can hardly complain of his own treatment by the British Government; he must admit that, being in a madhouse, it is natural that the inmates...
...brings out the fundamental features of the particular style of architecture which it represents, but only, so to speak, in sublimated, idealized form; while gradual and soft transitions of ornament and structure lead from one of these halls to another and make them all part of one noble unified whole. We shall therefore be able in this building to give all our objects a suitable historical setting. . . . . . I sincerely hope that the time is not distant when the Museum will also become a workshop for the specialist. I hope the time will come when every American scholar studying the history...