Word: elihu
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...through," says Mr. Lawrence. " The name most prominently mentioned as successor is that of Henry Fletcher, Ambassador to Belgium." Lawrence claims that Harvey has disagreed amicably with the President over the World Court. The rift goes back to Harding's campaign, when Harvey disregarded a telegram from Elihu Root, which declared that "it is very unwise to declare that the League is dead." This telegram was sent from Marion, shortly before Harding, then a candidate, made his Des Moines speech against America entering the League...
...Richards '86, of Cambridge, W. C. Forbes '92, of Westwood; M. H. Ittner, Ph.D. '96, of Jersey City, N. J.; Eugene DuPont '97, of Greenville, Del.; Eliot Wadsworth '98, of Washington, D. C.; G. C. Kimball '00, of Pittsburgh, Pa.; I. P. Hazard '95, of Syracuse, N. Y.; and Elihu Thompson, S. D. (Hon.) '09, of Swampscott...
...masses should be leavened by education, and the men should be taught to live peacably side by side through seeing one another clearly. In the United States the first material development of this idea was the formation of the Committee of One Hundred under the leadership of Mr. Elihu Root. Its purpose, announced early in March, is to bring to the American enter the "facts which form the necessary basis of all sound reasoning upon international affairs...
...dispute of an international character which the parties thereto submit to it. The Court may also give an advisory opinion upon any dispute or question referred to it by the Council or by the Assembly." In February, 1920, the Council appointed an Advisory Committee of Jurists, among them Elihu Root, who drew up a plan for the Court. In December of that year the Assembly of the League adopted the Committee's plan with alterations. This "statute" of the Court was subsequently ratified by a majority of the members of the League, and judges were elected. The Court...
...immediate occasion for this recrudescence was the, appearance in the January issue of the Yale Literary Magazine of an editorial by R. W. Davenport '23 which atacked Christianity in a most vigorous manner. Following this there was published in the first issue of the "Elihu" a new magazine at Yale, an article by the same author which struck in an equally agressive fashion at the Faculty and its methods of teaching, the Yale curriculum, and the type of education given at Yale. Along with these two leaders, there appeared in a more or less informal manner a weekly sheet called...