Word: englander
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
That mutual appreciation of national humor is an essential to good international relations, Mr. Maurois held, was fully borne out by the improved understanding of England and France in the past twenty years. "Good humorous criticisms of the foibles of other nations are an excellent way of building international good will," he went on. "For instance the acceptance by the English of my humorous sketch on the English army after the war shows how much more one book can do than hours of diplomatic bickering. There is a crying need now for a sympathetic book by an American on France...
...relations between England and France he felt are now better than ever, because there is an understanding that has gone down to the masses. America is being increasingly drawn into this alliance both because of her common background and the fact that her future is insolubly wound up with the existence of the French Army and the English Navy...
When the well-known depicter of New England farm life gave a reading at Harvard last fall under the auspices of the Morris Gray Poetry Fund, such a large audience attempted to crowd into Emerson D that the reading had to be shifted to the New Lecture Hall...
Thomas H. Eliot '32, Wages and Hours Administrator for New England, and Joseph Lash. National Executive Secretary of the American Student Union, spoke at the Second Annual Convention of the New England Student Union, held over the weekend...
...Bruening, former Chancellor of the German Republic (1930-35), has been for the past two academic years lecturer on Government during the first half of the year, and lecturer at Oxford University, England during the second half. While at Harvard he conducted a seminar on "Government Regulation of Industry; Some Post-War Experiments in European Industrial Control...