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

Tomorrow's CRIMSON will be a 28-page edition, including an eight-page illustrated sepia supplement. It will contain full information in regard to the rival elevens, their statistics, past scores, criticisms of their respective merits by R. W. P. Brown '98, and a story of Princeton University from the time of its founding to the present day. The supplement will be illustrated by pictures of the University and Princeton football squads, individual stars, the head coaches and action pictures of the two elevens...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: FOOTBALL EDITION TOMORROW | 11/10/1916 | See Source »

...Saturday, including the eight-page illustrated sepia supplement will be on sale at leading New York hotels by noon that day. It may also be purchased in the Boston hotels, at the Cambridge subway stations and at all newsstands in Cambridge. The issue will contain full information in regard to the rival elevens, their statistics, past scores and a criticism of their respective merits by R. W. P. Brown '98, and a story dealing strictly with Princeton University, its founding, and its growth...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: CRIMSON ON SALE IN NEW YORK | 11/9/1916 | See Source »

...power over, that people by any of the great nations, and could secure justice to China and the maintenance of its integrity." American has always stood for the "open-door" policy in China. In fact it was American who first made known to the world of her intentions in regard to that policy But lately she appears to be deaf and blind to the rapid changes that are being brought about in the Far East. Does it not seem that American has not seem that American has ignored the fact that she has already assumed the responsibility of being...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Victorious Party Must Bring New Era. | 11/7/1916 | See Source »

...regard to Mexico, Mr. Whittlesey again assumes that Huerta could have accomplished the impossible, if only he had been recognized, and declares for "legal insistence upon our rights." But as the New Republic of November 4 puts it: "He (Hughes) says he will protect American property abroad. Will he? Will he collect a usurious loan forced on a bankrupt government? If not, why not? If an American bribes a Latin American official and secures title to some enormous concession, will Mr. Hughes regard that as a right forever bound up with the honor of the United States?" What America wants...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Rule of Standpat Guard Near? | 11/6/1916 | See Source »

...same conception of rights has kept Mr. Hughes from helping us formulate a policy in regard to the European war. The sum total of Mr. Whittlesey's argument is that we would have obtained our pledge from Germany a little sooner under Mr. Hughes, and that we will succeed in "gaining fair treatment from England for our mails and cargoes." Just how, he neglects to state, but since we have already done everything but use force, economic or military, the intimation is that Mr. Hughes will do that! What a cheerful prospect this coercion of England for those...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Rule of Standpat Guard Near? | 11/6/1916 | See Source »

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