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© 1924 by The Regents of the University of California
1924
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*Dr. Dillon is eminent both as foreign correspondent and as a scholar of wide international reputation, and is the author of many works on philological and historical subjects. He holds degrees from French, Belgian, German and Russian universities, has been a Professor of Comparative Philology in the University of Kharkov, South Russia, has filled editorial positions on the staff of two Russian newspapers, before the World War, and has served as special correspondent in Armenia, Spain, Crete, China and Mexico, where he witnessed as a privileged observer in the Obregon camp the outbreak and development of the de la Huerta revolution. Intimately acquainted with the President of Mexico and with all the chief figures on both sides, his study of the careers and personalities involved has the vivid quality and psychological penetration of the trained observer.
Emile J. Dillon; The Inside Fads of the Mexican Revolution. Current History 1 July 1924; 20 (4): 586–596. doi: https://doi.org/10.1525/curh.1924.20.4.586
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