Word: expression
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...remainder of his speech was corroborative of what has been above described. He ended : "Perhaps I may be allowed to add a personal note to express gratitude for the very cordial way in which I, as head of the British Government, was received by all parties during my short stay in Paris...
...Berlin speech, he said: "It is far from my intention to express an opinion already regarding the London Conference, an invitation to which has not been extended to us yet.* But I am obliged to state that, owing to the agreements made between the Premiers of England and France, many of the hopes pinned on the London Conference seem to be seriously menaced...
Jefferson Caffery, U. S. Chargé d'Affaires, called upon Foreign Minister Baron Shidehara (onetime Ambassador to the U. S.) and asked him to make immediate investigation. Twice did the Foreign Minister call upon Mr. Caffery in order to express his concern over the incident and to offer the "most sincere regrets" of his Government. "Surely," said he, "no one in the U. S. would believe the Japanese people capable of sympathizing with an outrage of this kind " He also said that the police would do their utmost to apprehend the culprit-which they later succeeded in doing...
Friendly, courteous, firm, the note is brief and its principal contents, it was authoritatively stated, express dissatisfaction with Secretary Hughes' reply, and affirm Japan's intention of keeping the Immigration Act of 1924 an open question...
...many people who subscribe to the sanctity of tradition-in-Art have rented a studio for von Marr so that he may continue to teach them. The six professors, as one man, declared that "it makes no difference whether an artist is 65 or 25. A young man may express a musty spirit in his work, and the older man one that breathes the ardor of youth." Von Marr reversed the usual order of things, for he emigrated to Europe to seek his fame and fortune, and became the first and only State-employed professor of painting of American birth...