Word: turkish
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...authority for these statements rests on a large number of Consular Reports from all parts of Turkey. No less than 29 reliable persons who have come from the interior of Turkey to Boston within the past two months have been carefully interviewed. Documents from Greek, Bulgarian, Turkish, American, German, English, and Armenian sources have been brought together to justify this appeal...
...Diplomatic History," by Robert Howard Lord '06, Instructor in the Department of History, describes a period in the history of Poland that has never hitherto been written in detail. The book gives a comprehensive account of the series of events which began with the outbreak of the Russo-Turkish war in 1787 and ended in the new dismemberment of Poland six years later. It is based upon extensive researches in the archives of Petrograd, Moscow, Berlin, and Vienna, and upon the materials printed in Russian, Polish, and the western languages...
...battle-cruisers." The scientific man is playing an accordion, for he stretches out the "28" beyond their strength. The German "dreadnaughts" are numbered from 1 to 28 and include the battle-cruisers, one of which is the much talked of "Goeben," now leading a dissolute life as a Turkish cruiser. Six of the "28" are building. Nine of the "28" have nothing larger than 11-inch guns. So why make the diagram so black? THOMAS G. FROTHINGHAM...
...CRIMSON was hitting at no sect, creed or color when it protested against such personal campaigns. The writer of the editorial hadn't the faintest idea whether the most recent "flower Day" was for a Jewish society, or a Turkish or Swedish one. He simply knew that it was a private campaign, unauthorized by the University, and with an aim not generally known in the University. The CRIMSON is sorry if any one saw in the editorial an imputation that the "flower day" Monday was an attempt to get money under false pretenses. Nothing of the sort was intended...
...Diplomatic Club has thrown open its meeting of tonight to all members of the University, and two speakers of note have been secured. Mr. Phillip Brown, professor of International Law at Princeton will speak on "The Turkish Capitulations," and Dr. Hamilton Wright, the chairman of the American Committee at the International Opium Conference, will talk of the work of that conference in getting practically all the nations to make uniform restriction of the opium traffic. The meeting will be at a dinner to be held in the north to were of Memorial Hall at 6.30 o'clock, and those intending...