Word: sumner
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...review of "Never Too Late," a new comedy by Sumner Arthur Long, which opened at the Wilbur Theatre last night, will appear in tomorrow's CRIMSON...
Others are Everett I. Mendelsohn, assistant professor of the History of Science and research associate in the Graduate School of Public Administration; Barrington Moore, Jr., lecturer on Sociology and senior research fellow in the Russian Research Center; David Riesman '31, Henry Ford II Professor of Social Sciences; Sumner M. Rosen '43 research fellow in the Center for Middle Eastern Studies, Robert H. Spaethling, assistant professor of German...
...announced last night after its that two noted University also debate four days later, as of the same forum on economics and . Speaking on this topic at in Harvard Hall Tuesday, March be Sumner M. Rosen '48, research in the Center of Middle Eastern , and Arthur Smithies, chairman Department of Economics...
Founded in 1911 as a forum for public affairs, literature and the arts, the Review reached high right from its birth. Its first issue reprinted a remarkably prescient article. "War,'' originally written in 1903 by Dr. William Graham Sumner, Yale professor of political and social science and author of 15 books. "There is only one thing rationally to be expected," wrote Sumner, "and that is a frightful effusion of blood in revolution and war during the century now opening.'' In 1914 the Review published a trenchant appraisal of "The Powers of the President...
...Died. Sumner Welles, 68, urbane, aristocratic architect of the U.S. Good Neighbor Policy toward Latin America, a Grot-on-and-Harvard product who headed the State Department's Latin American Affairs Division at 29, as Under Secretary of State became the confidant of Family Friend Franklin Roosevelt and served as personal presidential emissary on fruitless prewar missions to Hitler and Mussolini, only to be forced into resignation-and virtual retirement-in 1943, when Secretary of State Cordell Hull delivered a "him or me" ultimatum to F.D.R.; in Bernardsville, N.J. Condemned by critics as the embodiment of traditional striped-pants...