[680] Chicago Herald and Examiner, October 15, 1922.

[681] Ibid. According to a pamphlet of the English-Speaking Union “it is an organization based on individual membership, and is non-political and non-sectarian. It aims at no alliance, and is not connected with governments. It takes for granted that the growth of friendship between English-speaking peoples in no way implies or produces unfriendly relations between English-speaking peoples and those of other lands and tongues.”

[682] Ibid.

[683] Ibid.

[684] Ibid.

[685] Ibid.

[686] Ibid.

[687] Chicago Herald and Examiner, January 14, 1923. This article names others than educators as open to the charges of “Anglicization.” Among these are Rev. Dr. James E. Barton, George E. Roberts, a Magna Charta Day Committeeman, vice-president and publicity manager of the National City Bank, New York and “propaganda expert of the International Banking Corporation,” who, with “Henry S. Pritchett, president of the Carnegie Foundation, conducts a correspondence school in ‘Economics for Business Executives,’ another spacious channel for special privilege.”

[688] Ibid. Edwin Greenlaw’s book, Problems of Democracy, was condemned also by Mr. Miller. It is not a history textbook, however.

[689] Ibid.