Word: states
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...spring production, "Crowns and Clowns." King Ivan, C. A. Clark '19 Anna, H. C. Flower '19 Borus, C. Canfield '19 Catherine, D. H. Read '19 Umptsky, A. Horween '20 Horse, E. A. Bacon '20, J. C. Bolton '20 Minister of Army, G. C. Barclay '19 Minister of State, H. K. White '19 Minister of Finance, W. A. Gaston...
...rifle squad last night, S. K. Bolton '21 was elected captain, and T. G. Holcombe '20, manager of the team for the coming season. Arrangements have been made to have the team use the Naval Range at Wakefield. Indoor practice is at present held regularly at the Bay State School of Musketry in Boston. Matches are to be scheduled with Yale, Princeton, Dartmouth, Tufts, Brown, and Boston University...
...recent editorial under the title "Page the Harvard Clubs" the CRIMSON mentioned certain possibilities open to these organizations. The figures showing the number of men from each state studying at the University give point to this subject. Too much stress cannot be put upon statistics during such an unusual year as this. The figures reveal a healthy representation from without New England, and it would be hard to duplicate the showing in any other university. Yet the numbers recruited from other states than Massachusetts is far too small when the opportunities offered are considered...
...least 526 words of his speech of March 3rd to the end of endeavoring to show that the Covenant is badly drafted in that the high contracting parties and the league itself may be two separate entities. With all due respect to Senator Knox, it is the custom of states making a treaty to call themselves the high contracting parties and each state signing or adhering to the treaty becomes, ipso facto, a high contracting party. The writer has just had occasion to examine and copy parts of the actual texts of about fifty treaties for the last four centuries...
President Lowell and Senator Lodge are relatively of the same attitude on the League of Nations as were Webster and Hayne in their famous debate over the theory of "states' rights." In his life of Webster, Senator Lodge says that Webster's argument on the supremacy of the central government was historically unsound. He asserts that in 1787-88 "there was not a man in the country . . . who regarded the new system as anything but an experiment entered upon by the states, and from which each and every state had the right peaceably to withdraw, a right which was very...