Word: prussian
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Without any ceremony, so the papers have it, the dean dispatched a note to Stephenson informing him that he was suspended for his article which was deemed "prejudicial to good discipline." Certainly a Prussian conception of discipline, one would say. And so Stephenson's fellow students evidently thought, for they presented a petition for the reconsideration of the summary sentence passed upon him. They also secured from other college papers, the CRIMSON among others, copies of editorials wherein student editors opposed their college administration, hoping to convince Dean Troxell that Stephenson's act was as nothing compared to similar instances...
...letter received from Wilhelm von Bode, Director-General of the Prussian State Museum, is mentioned a highly commendatory article on Harvard's German Museum, published recently in "Der Kunstwanderer." The key note of the article is regret that such a museum of casts of German sculpture should not exist in Berlin...
...also been received. The 150 contributors to the Birthday Book comprise, among others, professors of German literature and art at German universities, and colleagues and former students at all the foremost universities and colleges of America. Among the contributions from Germany may be mentioned those by the former Prussian Minister of Education, Friedrick Schmidt-Ott, the former Secretary of the Interior, Theodora Lewald, the former Director-General of the Prussian Museums, Withelm von Bode, the America Ambassador, J. G. Schurman; the writers, Count Keyserling and Thomas Mann, Professor Friedliender and Dibelius of Berlin, Clemen of Bonn, and Eucken of Jena...
...this letter Wilhelm von Bode, director-general emeritus of the Prussian State Museums, mentions a highly commendatory article on the Germanic Museum of the University, published in the September number of "Der Kunstwanderer." The key note of the article is regret that such a museum of casts of German sculpture should not exist in Berlin...
Died. Dr. Hugo Preuss, 65, chief author of the German Republican Constitution,* noted post-War German statesman, scholar, professor, jurist, sometime member of both the Prussian Diet and the Imperial Parliament, German Secretary of the Interior in 1918, and noted Jewish intellectual; at Berlin, mourned by almost the entire German press, with the exception of the extreme Monarchist sheetlets...