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Word: hohenzollerne (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...from following the cautious policy naturally to be expected in defeat, the Germans practically united in a glorification of the old regime,--a glorification which consisted mainly in demanding the creation of a greater Germany extending far-beyond the 1914 frontiers, the establishment of a solid empire under a Hohenzollern Kaiser, and a return to the never-forgotten leadership of Bismarckian ideals The collapse of the latter-day monarchy was skillfully relegated to oblivion, and the pride and strength of Prussian domination enthusiastically proclaimed...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: "DEUTSCHLAND UBER ALLES!" | 1/19/1921 | See Source »

...Greeks have a right to elect any leader they want, but they would do well to lot reason dictate their action. All nations, although without authority to interfere, hope that Greece will not make the mistake of recalling a man who was a pro-Hohenzollern during the war. It would undo much of the work accomplished by Venizelos--and no one did more to prosper Hellenic aspirations. It would complicate exceedingly the near-Eastern problem in which all Europe is interested. It would repudiate Greece as one of the Allies. It is to be hoped that the Greeks will take...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: A WARNING TO GREECE | 12/4/1920 | See Source »

...print room is found a series of important original drawings by old and modern masters. One of these is a portrait drawing, formerly known as the "Princess Hohenzollern," by Albrecht Durer, dated 1525. This portrait drawing, for the possession of which scores of museums and private collectors have been striving, is highly spoken of by Mr. Campbell Dodgson of the British Museum, and has been reproduced in Lippmann's work on Durer drawings. Significant also are the 16th Century drawings by Francois Clouet, and a set of four by Ingres and other leading draughtsmen of the 19th Century...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: ALTER EXHIBITION ROOMS | 11/1/1920 | See Source »

Room 45, "Sufonet"--S. E. Frank, I. Shapiro, M. A. Kugel; room 46, "Dolly Varden," K. P. Smerage, M. H. Davis; room 47, "Paul Hedrick," H. S. Coffin; room 48, "Old Hickory," S. Fisher; room 49, "William Hohenzollern," T. H. Kaplan, A. G. Callaghan; room 50, "No Brahmin," M. Vaughan; room 51, "Socrates Jones," J. H. Marr, F. W. Crane; room 52, "Golden State," F. U. Perry, H. B. Brown; room 54-56, "Bryan for President," W. Slade, Jr., A. B. Nichols, Jr., T. R. Thayer, R. S. Ward, S. W. Fordyce, 3d; room 57, "Jupiter" D. L. Cohen...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: ALLOT ROOMS IN YARD TO MEMBERS OF 1921 | 3/22/1920 | See Source »

When Prince Joachim shied a plate at the head of a member of the French Mission with true Hohenzollern dexterity, he started more than even he expected. With the American Senate trying to squirm away from under world obligations, Great Britain gasping under active and latent industrial unrest, and the Bolshevik government threatening the Polish frontier, the German monarchists could not have picked a better time for their "comeback." France, alone, has been alive to the dangerous situation, but her warnings were only recently branded by President Wilson as imperialistic tendencies...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE "COMEBACK." | 3/15/1920 | See Source »

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