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President Woodrow Wilson made the saying famous, but he was not the first one who used it. The British futurist writer and social commentator H.G. Wells invented the phrase. He predicted that ...
In the 1920s, memories of Theodore Roosevelt begin to fade. The Great War is over, Woodrow Wilson is ill, and the American public is weary of domestic reform and events overseas. The Republican ...
Widely respected for his intellect and political acumen, Colonel Edward House was Woodrow Wilson ... the death of Wilson's first wife, Ellen. When Wilson, increasingly ill, returned from Europe ...
So when the No. 4 Timberwolves entered halftime of Wednesday night’s Class AAAA quarterfinal against No. 5 Woodrow Wilson with 19 points on 28 percent shooting, Chaffin hardly panicked.