Word: supports
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...magazine has the support of several members of the English Department, among them Mr. T. L. Hood '08, who has an article in the present issue, and Mr. B. H. Lehman, who wrote the criticism in this issue of the CRIMSON. Contributions are open from all members of the University and Radcliffe, articles being chosen for publication on the grounds of literary merit...
...further criticism which should be made is that, although the business editors admit the active support of certain members of the English Department, no mention of this fact is made in the Magazine. Such support is a big step forward in making it possible for the best works handed in in English compostion courses to be dug up from their repositories and given to the public. In this way much material that would otherwise die a natural death can be utilized. But it seems only right that this fact be brought out so that the erroneous impression that...
...centre in the fear that the United States, by endorsing such an agreement, would be robbed of its right of sovereignty in domestic as well as in foreign affairs. This attitude of his is peculiarly interesting in view of a statement made by him in May, 1916, in support of the platform of the League to Enforce Peace. At that time he is quoted as saying: "I know how quickly we shall be met with the statement that this is a dangerous question which you are putting into your agreement; that no nation can submit to the judgment of other...
...diplomacy. We had no outlying possessions to command our attention in foreign parts; the two oceans surrounding us were deemed a sufficient barrier to prevent any serious interference in American affairs by the European powers. Further more it was well understood that the Monroe Dostrine was assured of the support of the British fleet in case a manifestation of force should become necessary...
...vigor with which he used the military to quell the mining strikes in the Pas de Calais department in 1906. He fired the wrath of the bourgeois by his denouncement of the Russian Alliance and his firm belief in the necessity of an entente with England. His untiring support of Dreyfus, in the long years when that famous case was disrupting all France, brought him many personal enemies among the military class. But in spite of all hostility to his past record, the French nation recognized him as its most implacable foe to Germany, its greatest patriot...