Woodrow Wilson's own story /
Woodrow Wilson's own story /
selected and edited by Donald Day.
- 1st ed.
- Boston : Little, Brown and Company, 1952.
- 371 p. ; 22 cm.
With hard- and supercover
Index: pp. 365-371
Cont.: Part I: "When a Man Comes to Himself" -- I. "The Mind Is Not a Prolix Gut" -- II. "The Profession I Chose Was Politics" -- III. He Comes to Himself Emotionally -- IV. He Comes to Himself as a Teacher -- V. He Comes to Himself as a "Literary Politician" -- VI. What It Will Take for the Country to Come to Itself -- VII. "When a Man Comes to Himself" -- Part II: When a University Comes to Itself -- VIII. "Princeton for the Nation's Service" -- IX. Education and Democracy -- Part III: When a "State" COmes to Itself -- X. "The Profession I Chose" -- XI. "We Are Put into This World to Act" -- XII. "The New Freedom" -- Part IV: When a Nation Comes to Itself -- XIII. Full Realization of His Powers -- XIV. The World Comes Apart -- XV. "Too Proud to Fight" -- XVI. "Preparedness Must be Both Physical and Spiritual" -- XVII. The Difference between a Republican and a Democrat -- Part V: When a WOrld Comes to Itself -- XVIII. "The World Must Be Made Safe for Democracy" -- XIX. Making the World Safe for Democracy -- XX. Over the Heads of the Rulers -- XXI. Making Democracy Safe for the World -- XXII. The Machinery for Making the World Safe -- XXIII. The People or the "Rulers" in the United States -- XXIV. Making Democracy Unsafe for the World -- Epilogue: How the World May Come to Itself.
Wilson, Woodrow, 1856-1924
United States--Politics and government--1913-1921
With hard- and supercover
Index: pp. 365-371
Cont.: Part I: "When a Man Comes to Himself" -- I. "The Mind Is Not a Prolix Gut" -- II. "The Profession I Chose Was Politics" -- III. He Comes to Himself Emotionally -- IV. He Comes to Himself as a Teacher -- V. He Comes to Himself as a "Literary Politician" -- VI. What It Will Take for the Country to Come to Itself -- VII. "When a Man Comes to Himself" -- Part II: When a University Comes to Itself -- VIII. "Princeton for the Nation's Service" -- IX. Education and Democracy -- Part III: When a "State" COmes to Itself -- X. "The Profession I Chose" -- XI. "We Are Put into This World to Act" -- XII. "The New Freedom" -- Part IV: When a Nation Comes to Itself -- XIII. Full Realization of His Powers -- XIV. The World Comes Apart -- XV. "Too Proud to Fight" -- XVI. "Preparedness Must be Both Physical and Spiritual" -- XVII. The Difference between a Republican and a Democrat -- Part V: When a WOrld Comes to Itself -- XVIII. "The World Must Be Made Safe for Democracy" -- XIX. Making the World Safe for Democracy -- XX. Over the Heads of the Rulers -- XXI. Making Democracy Safe for the World -- XXII. The Machinery for Making the World Safe -- XXIII. The People or the "Rulers" in the United States -- XXIV. Making Democracy Unsafe for the World -- Epilogue: How the World May Come to Itself.
Wilson, Woodrow, 1856-1924
United States--Politics and government--1913-1921