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Word: panning (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
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Usage:

Boston's police strike is the motive for two articles. The first, "Pan and the Populace," by Mr. Fuller, is a readable account of the author's experiences on volunteer patrol duty. Mr. Garrison's "A Plan for the Police," a sound and fair-minded discussion of the police problem, typifies the stand that the re-born Advocate has taken for enlightened liberalism...

Author: By John Cowles, | Title: "MOTHER ADVOCATE" BACK ON THE JOB FOR HARVARD | 11/5/1919 | See Source »

Permission has been granted by Dean Greenough for aviators representing the University to leave tomorrow night for Atlantic City, where they will take part in the second series of week-end intercollegiate air races now being held there in conjunction with the Second Pan-American Aeronautical Exposition, under the auspices of the Aero Club of America. Owing to their inability to secure a machine the University aviators did not take part in last Saturday's race...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Aviators Leave for Atlantic City | 5/7/1919 | See Source »

...year became secretary to the American legation in Vienna. He left the legation to become instructor in history here. He has been exchange lecturer at the University of Berlin and at the Sorbonne, accompanied the Taft party to the Philippines in 1905 and was the University delegate at the Pan-American Scientific Congress in Satiago, Chill, in 1908. He has written "The United States as a World Power," "The Origin of the Triple Alliance", and "The American Historical Review...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Leave for Peace Conference | 12/6/1918 | See Source »

Junkers and Pan-Germanists now in the saddle in Germany are so drunk with the power gained by their new conquests that they appear to think they can defy all the world. "Whom the gods would destroy they first make mad." --New York Herald...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: COMMENT | 3/19/1918 | See Source »

...must inevitably turn to the land of many races and mongrel nations if we are ever clearly to understand them. The events of July, 1914, were in great part the result of the previous thirty years intrigue in the Balkans. The events of March, 1918, are surely the same. Pan-Germanism, for three years at a stand-still, once more takes up its march Eastward. The great Central Empire, extending from the North Sea to Constantinople and far into Asia Minor, the German dream realized stares the world in the face...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: PAN-GERMANISM REALIZED? | 3/8/1918 | See Source »

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