Search Details

Word: dutche (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first (reverse)


Usage:

...Hodges. W. M. Crane '02, Harvard College. S. Cunningham, Jr., '01, Harvard College. A. M. Dame '02, Harvard College. H. S. Davis '01, Harvard College. A. L. Dean '00, Class of 1814. H. DeBray '02, Burr. A. F. Downing '00, Pennoyer. D. F. Drake '00, Harvard College. C. F. Dutch '01, Sever. K. B. Emerson '02, Saltonstall. O. D. Evans '00, Bowditch. A. H. Fiske '01, Harvard College. R. S. Forbes '00, Harvard College. E. E. Franchot '02, Harvard College. J. V. Freeman, Jr., '01, Pennoyer. A. Friedman '02, Burr. D. D. F. Garcelon '02, Rebecca A. Perkins...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: DISTINCTION CONFERRED | 12/21/1899 | See Source »

Weston, the first Princeton speaker, first referred to the official despatches made in the blue books; that any alien, resident for five years in the Transvaal should have full political rights; that Johannesburg should be admitted to the legislature, and that the English language as well as the Dutch should be used in the legislature. Consular representation between the Transvaal and the European states gave the Transvaal the status of an independent state. At the convention at London in 1884 the word "suzerainty" was omitted and thus it became a known fact that the Transvaal was independent. The drafter...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: ANOTHER VICTORY. | 12/16/1899 | See Source »

...conclusion, Morse pointed out that a continuation of the subtle hatred among the peoples of the Transvaal would threaten English interests in all South Africa; and that the only way to secure the desired harmony between the Dutch and the English was to grant to the Uitlanders full rights in the South African republic...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: ANOTHER VICTORY. | 12/16/1899 | See Source »

...English have sanctioned this idea in the minds of the Boers for the last thirteen years. The policy of the Transvaal, bad as it is made out by the affirmative to be, has not endangered the interests of the English in South Africa. Mr. Bryce states that the Dutch of the Cape Colony were not disloyal to the English. He also states that if the people of the Transvaal acceded to the claims of the English, the country would sink to the level of a regular English colony. In conclusion, Jones said that if the Transvaal yielded to the demands...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: ANOTHER VICTORY. | 12/16/1899 | See Source »

This evening Professor Macvane will repeat, by special request, the lecture which he delivered last week on "England and the Transvaal." Beginning with an account of the past relations of the English and the Dutch colonists in South Africa, Professor Macvane will show the present condition of politics and society there, and explain the causes which have led up to the present war. The lecture will be delivered in the Fogg Art Museum at eight o'clock...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Lecture on "England and the Transvaal" | 11/1/1899 | See Source »

First | Previous | 1480 | 1481 | 1482 | 1483 | 1484 | 1485 | 1486 | 1487 | 1488 | 1489 | 1490 | 1491 | 1492 | 1493 | 1494 | 1495 | 1496 | 1497 | 1498 | 1499 | 1500 | Next | Last