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Since the war this Spanish novelist has been thrust from the lime-light back upon the obscure wings of the stage. He intends now to recover his stellar role by leading a new crusade against Spanish military despotism. The present foe is not the Hun, but the repressive Directory headed by General Primo de Rivera. It is against this hydra of temporal and intellectual enslavement that Ibanez is trying to arouse universal indignation...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE HORSEMAN AFOOT | 10/17/1924 | See Source »

Germany wants more money. She has a horrid gap in the budget. What can she do? Possibly nine-tenths of the population of the world are millionaires in German eyes. Then they must be taxed. This cannot be done, but a brilliant Hun thought put a wonderful scheme of taxing foreign words. Thus if anybody prefers "hotel" for " gasthof," "coiffeur" for " haarkünstler," " restaurant " for " wirtschaft," he must pay for offending the populace with these horrid, florid words...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign News: Foreign Words Taboo | 6/11/1923 | See Source »

...over her invasion of the Ruhr, but the comment is not intrinsically pro-German. It is usually a disapproval of the French method. It seems unlikely that France will get as much as she expected from the Ruhr; but if she does win through, and succeeds in forcing the Hun to his knees, many voices will unite in shouting: "Vive la France!" Policy. The damage caused to France during the war is an old story. It hardly needs repetition. The French claim that 85,750,000,000 francs worth of damage was done and say that what they want...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign News: The Ruhr: Mar. 31, 1923 | 3/31/1923 | See Source »

...more amateur yachtsmen, but the bulk of them were American college undergraduates. "Boys of Yale, Harvard, Princeton-indeed practically every college and university in the land-had dropped their books, left the comfort of their fraternity houses, and abandoned their athletic fields, eager for the great adventure against the Hun". That they at first knew nothing of navigation and naval technique was of less importance than that "their minds were alert, their hearts filled with an intense enthusiasm for the cause, their souls clean, and their bodies ready for the most exhausting tasks. So much was I in pressed...

Author: By Rear ADMIRAL Sims, | Title: REAR ADMIRAL SIMS TELLS OF EXCEPTIONAL WORK DONE BY COLLEGE MEN IN NAVY DURING WAR | 12/16/1922 | See Source »

Shot-Put--Won by H. T. Dunker (1925) 40ft. 11in.; second, Luce (Hun.), 40ft. 10in.; third, F. G. Cleveland (1925), 38ft...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: HUNTINGTON DEFEATS 1925 ON TRACK 39-29 | 2/16/1922 | See Source »

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