Word: bismarckers
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...York for Southampton and Cherbourg on July 4. Not only will she make her first trip since receiving the $10,000,000 alterations which have equipped her for passenger service; she will go forth now as the largest vessel ever afloat. Hitherto the Majestic, a British ship (formerly the Bismarck) was the largest vessel, with a registered tonnage of 56,551 and a length of 915.5 feet. The Shipping Board announces, however, that on account of alterations on the Leviathan-chiefly because of changing her from a coal burner to an oil burner-her tonnage...
Joseph Vincent Fuller '14: Bismarck's Diplomacy at its Zenith. Based on the latest German official publications, this study covers the years 1886 and 1887, a crucial period in modern European history...
Whether these memoirs of one so intimately connected with the War will have a political as well as sensational interest, remains to be seen. With the exception of the chapter on "Bismarck", most of the book will deal with men still living--some of them in a "retirement not unlike that of the Kaiser. As for the former, let us hope that it will throw some further light on the incident so brilliantly alluded to by the London Punch in "Dropping the Pilot". Does Wilhelm regret his action, we wonder, and if so will he have the courage...
...ideas as to how Ireland should be governed should be put into one great convention hall and the doors locked; after allowing sufficient time for argument the doors should be opened,--and the survivor would rule the country! Possibly the Irish may reach a point where they find Bismarck's suggestion the only possible way out. He is supposed to have said. "There is absolutely nothing to this Irish Question! If I had the say-so, I should simply move all the Dutch to Ireland and all the Irish to Holland,--and then cut the dikes!" At all events...
...impartial college president will permit it, so the periodical infers, our instructors are engaged in an unceasing border warfare which results in a balance of power as proclaimed in the announcement of courses. "To multiply subjects is to multiply rivalries. But a shrewd Bismarck of a professor who has a nice expansive subject such as sociology, history, or philosophy can soon be trespassing on every field in the whole curriculum before his colleagues--or his students--suspect what he is doing...