Woodrow Wilson and the World War: A Chronicle of Our Own TimesThe Floating Press, 1. 7. 2014. - 214 страница From the current vantage point, World War I was but one of a series of global military conflicts that defined the political landscape of the twentieth century. However, in the immediate aftermath of the war, it represented a seismic shift after which nothing would ever be the same again. This probing analysis penned just after the war's end focuses on the key role played by Woodrow Wilson, the 28th president of the United States. |
Из књиге
Резултати 1-5 од 91
Страница 4
A Chronicle of Our Own Times Charles Seymour Allen Johnson. Chapter. I. -. Wilson. the. Executive. *. When, on March 4, 1913, Woodrow Wilson entered the White House, the first Democratic president elected in twenty years, no one could have ...
A Chronicle of Our Own Times Charles Seymour Allen Johnson. Chapter. I. -. Wilson. the. Executive. *. When, on March 4, 1913, Woodrow Wilson entered the White House, the first Democratic president elected in twenty years, no one could have ...
Страница 6
... Wilson to enter political life; an ambition for such a career had evidently stirred him in early days and was doubtless resuscitated by his success as a public speaker. While President of Princeton he had frequently touched upon public ...
... Wilson to enter political life; an ambition for such a career had evidently stirred him in early days and was doubtless resuscitated by his success as a public speaker. While President of Princeton he had frequently touched upon public ...
Страница 8
... Wilson had stamped himself as an antimachine progressive, and if the machine conservatives threatened he might hope ... President has seldom undergone so much analysis with such unsatisfactory results; almost every discussion of Wilson's ...
... Wilson had stamped himself as an antimachine progressive, and if the machine conservatives threatened he might hope ... President has seldom undergone so much analysis with such unsatisfactory results; almost every discussion of Wilson's ...
Страница 9
... President withdraws, commences the business of consideration, comparison, and assessment, and then emerges with a ... President of the Czecho-Slovak Republic, Thomas G. Masaryk, said that of all the men he had met, "your visionary ...
... President withdraws, commences the business of consideration, comparison, and assessment, and then emerges with a ... President of the Czecho-Slovak Republic, Thomas G. Masaryk, said that of all the men he had met, "your visionary ...
Страница 10
A Chronicle of Our Own Times Charles Seymour Allen Johnson. President is by far and away the most intensely practical." One of the Big Four at Paris remarked: "Wilson works. The rest of us play, comparatively speaking. We Europeans can't ...
A Chronicle of Our Own Times Charles Seymour Allen Johnson. President is by far and away the most intensely practical." One of the Big Four at Paris remarked: "Wilson works. The rest of us play, comparatively speaking. We Europeans can't ...
Садржај
4 | |
20 | |
Chapter III The Submarine | 33 |
Chapter IV Plots and Preparedness | 48 |
Chapter V America Decides | 62 |
Chapter VI The Nation in Arms | 76 |
Chapter VII The Home Front | 97 |
Chapter VIII The Fighting Front | 123 |
Chapter X Ways of the Peace Conference | 161 |
Chapter XI Balance of Power or League of Nations? | 178 |
Chapter XII The Settlement | 196 |
Chapter XIII The Senate and the Treaty | 208 |
Chapter XIV Conclusion | 222 |
Bibliographical Note | 228 |
Endnotes | 232 |
Chapter IX The Path to Peace | 145 |
Друга издања - Прикажи све
Чести термини и фразе
abroad accept Administration Allies American army American Expeditionary Force American troops appeal approved armistice aroused attack attitude Austria-Hungary Board British Château-Thierry Clemenceau Colonel House Commission committee Congress coöperation coördination Council Covenant crisis declared defeat defense definite delegates demanded Democratic diplomatic divisions draft economic effect enemy Entente Europe European experts fighting finally Foch force foreign Fourteen Points France French German Government Germany's ideals importance industrial insisted interest issues Italian justice labor lack leaders League of Nations Lloyd George manufacture Marne merely military million months moral munitions naval negotiations neutral operations organization Paris Peace Conference Pershing plans political popular practical prepared preparedness movement President Wilson President's principles problems programme proved railroads refused Republican reservations result Roosevelt secure seemed Senate ships speeches struggle submarine success supplies Sussex pledge territorial transportation treaty Treaty of London United victory vote warfare Woodrow Wilson