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Yale and Princeton have, in response to the protest registered by the University Debating Council against the wording of the subject for the annual triangular debate, suggested a substitute. "Resolved, That Congress should adopt all measures necessary to suppress propaganda having for its purpose the overthrow of the government--constitutionality of the principle granted," is the proposition as it now stands and it will doubtless be accepted in this form...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: REACH AGREEMENT ON FINAL WORDING OF DEBATE TOPIC | 3/4/1920 | See Source »

Mexico has apparently come to the conclusion that is is the better part of valor to suppress the kidnappers who have been operating along our border for the past two or three years. Our neighbor to the south burned his fingers in the Jenkins case, and evidently decided to take no chances on further complications arising from the kidnapping of the American named Hugo. What it all goes to show is that Carranza, no matter what he says, is pretty well able to dictate to the bandits what they shall and what they shall not do. Americans find it hard...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: MEXICO AND THE MONROE DOCTRINE. | 12/17/1919 | See Source »

...perfect. Radicals do not uphold the constitution. Note that Mr. Gleason does not say it openly; he says it by innuendo, if Mr. Gleason is one of that kind of thinkers who class all radicals as revolutionary, and, therefore, below contempt, "radical outbursts" being something to discredit and suppress as dangerous to our constitution, he is one of those gentlemen who sit on the safety valve of social unrest and compress the steam of "radicalism" into real revolution. A consideration of problems, not a contemptuous labelling of all bubbling of the cauldron as "radical outbursts," is perhaps what we most...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: A Constitutional Radical | 10/27/1919 | See Source »

...voice was to his flock a consolation, his face was a benediction. Four and a half long years he sustained the courage of his people; while his protests, which rang through out the world, were for the oppressors a rebuke and a defiance which they did not venture to suppress...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF LAWS GIVEN CARDINAL | 10/7/1919 | See Source »

...worth the price of admission; and the editorial is so like what the Transcript actually preaches--it is perhaps rather better written--as to suggest that it was contributed in all seriousness from the Transcript office. Excellent, too, is the life of General Edwards which may, one would hope, suppress the possible appearance of the half-dozen volumes of biography which seem destined to appear in defiance of sweet reasonableness. The Book Page is weak; but the Churchman Afield, particularly its notes, would not be despised by Mr. Leacock. The account of the War is in the Transcript's best...

Author: By Harold J. Laski., | Title: LAMPOON'S BURLESQUE OF TRANSCRIPT REAL HUMOR | 5/12/1919 | See Source »

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