Word: friedrich
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Schuman found sympathizers on the faculty. Carl J. Friedrich, professor of Government and former political advisor to General Lucius Clay in Germany, said that immediate rearmament of Germany would be a "major blunder." There are many reasons for this, but the main one is that rearmament now would promote "the most unreliable elements in Germany," while weakening those political elements we (the U.S.) depend on most heavily, Friedrich maintained...
...been mentioned or noticed in any way. So you see! Perhaps you will revise your Mammy editorial before hauling it out again next year. There used to be Mother's Day in pre-war Germany and probably you could find other countries equally "foolish." Leonore P. Friedrich...
...Social Sciences area has any middle ground, Government is just that. Every college has a political science department, but the Government Department offers much more. Courses range from McCloskey's almost purely historical American Constitutional Development (124) to Hanford's practical State Government (140) and Friedrich's philosophical History of Political Thought (106--for seniors...
...Comparative Government, respectively, with increasing authority but with notable variations in degree of interest. Fainsod's Know Your Enemy 1 (Gov. 115: Dictatorship and the Government and Politics of the Soviet Union) has been a great box office success since the Cold War began. Topping off the group is Friedrich's weighty 106, which "traces the development of political thought and jurisprudence from Greek and Jewish antiquity . . . to the nineteenth century and relates it to cultural and institutional growth." This course is open only to seniors and graduate students, with a knowledge of European history recommended. McCloskey, a rapidly rising...
...Others: "Professor" Friedrich Bhaer, who married one of Louisa M. Alcott's Little Women; James Whitcomb Riley's "Perfesser John Clark Ridpath, A.M., LL.D., T-Y-TY." The TYTY was a bit of Riley humor. Since schoolchildren used to spell by syllable (e.g., PURITY, p-u-r-PUR; iI; t-y-TY), the alphabet after the "perfesser's" name brought forth from Riley the old classroom response...