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...Lloyd McKim Garrison Prize, consisting of $100 and a silver medal, for "the best poem on a subject or subjects annually to be chosen and announced by a Committee of the Department of English" will this year be given for a poem on either of the following subjects: "Tripoli", "Robert Browning, May 7, 1812". Each poem should not exceed fifty lines, should bear an assumed name, and should be accompanied by a sealed letter containing the true name of the writer and superscribed with the assumed name. The prize is open only to undergraduates of Harvard College...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: GARRISON PRIZE SUBJECTS | 11/29/1911 | See Source »

...control of the Christians. Yet this region as it is today is not a country which is fitted to produce on the modern scale. Rivers run through it into the sea, but in the dry season they become simply dried up river beds. So Italy, in undertaking to conquer Tripoli and use it as a colony, must be prepared to spend years in introducing modern methods and systems of cultivation...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Mr. Furlong's Lecture on Tripoli | 10/25/1911 | See Source »

...Moroccan situation gave Italy her chance to step into Tripoli, a land filled with a motley crowd of people. There are whites, Arabs, and Negroes composing the chief element of the population, and there are the Bedouins or nomadic Arabs living in the oases which are sprinkled over the desert and around the towns. But these people are hard to civilize and, as much as they hate their Turkish conquerors, they like them better than they do the Christians. The country has always been closed to the civilizing influences which have sometimes been set toward it. It remains a land...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Mr. Furlong's Lecture on Tripoli | 10/25/1911 | See Source »

Italy had no moral right to step across to Africa, as Tripoli had given her no cause for war. But she is politically justified, for she needs room. It is a case of now or never, for France might step in from Tunis and Algeria at any time, were she not occupied elsewhere. Italy, however, is going to encounter difficulties. The city of Tripoli is taken, but not the country. Water is scarce even in the city, camels are absolutely necessary for transportation, and food is in the absolute control of the Turkish rulers of the land...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Mr. Furlong's Lecture on Tripoli | 10/25/1911 | See Source »

Italy has really made nothing more than a raid, not a war. Hardly good target practice was afforded at the bombardment of Tripoli, for the palace is so long that no sighting right or left is necessary to hit it. And, anyway, there was no resistance, for the Turks went away, leaving their banner flying and the Italians firing. A war with the forces of Turks in Tripoli would be a force if both armies were on an equal footing, but the control of necessary supplies by the Turkish army renders matters dangerous for the Italians. The terrible heat...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Mr. Furlong's Lecture on Tripoli | 10/25/1911 | See Source »

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