Word: jusserand
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...inevitable Mrs. Mabel Walker Willebrandt, Assistant U. S. Attorney General, spoke on Prohibition. General Pershing made a brief, soldierly plea for military training. Sir Esme Howard paid tribute to Lincoln. M. Jules Jusserand reflected on his life in the U. S. President Coolidge asked women to vote...
...December 7, 1923. The former President, signatory of the Versailles Treaty, according to Keynes and Poincare the proponent of many of the reparations terms which have since been found unworkable, said to his interviewer: "I should like to see Germany clean up France, and I should like to meet Jusserand [French Ambassador to the U. S.] and tell him that to his 'face." Mr. Kerney added: "He was plainly irritated at the French politicians; none among them, save Loucheur, he felt had told him the truth. Stanley Baldwin's defeat was a good thing, not only for England...
Five hundred mourners, leaders in the public life of the Nation, were present. There was Mrs. Warren G. Harding, there were members of the Coolidge Cabinet, members of the Wilson Cabinet, a delegation of eleven Senators, a delegation of 26 Representatives, Samuel Gompers, Ambassador Jules Jusserand and many others...
...President and Mrs. Coolidge held their first Diplomatic Reception. Between 9 p. m. and midnight 2,000 guests passed the receiving line. Mrs. Coolidge, in ivory white brocade with white roses, was assisted by Mrs. Hughes. In the diplomatic group, headed by the French Ambassador, M. Jusserand, were the Ambassadors, Ministers and Charges d'Affaires of 49 nations, with their wives, their secretaries and attaches (from two to a score for each nation) and the wives of the secretaries and attaches. One notable group who conversed together in the Blue Room after being received included, Ambassador and Mme. Jusserand...
...Ambassador Jusserand called at the White House accompanied by Senator Paul Dupuy of France (owner of Le Petit Parisien and close friend of Premier Poincaré) for an informal discussion of Franco-American relations. Afterwards, M. Jusserand was asked by reporters what M. Dupuy had had to say. The Ambassador, who like the French Senator is a newspaper man, replied with a French proverb: "Les loups ne se mangent pas entre eux" (literally, "The wolves do not eat themselves among one another...