Word: 26th
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...team leaves Chicago behind, and three days elapse before San Francisco is reached, where the men stay from 5.10 on Christmas eve until 8 P. M. the next night. The final goal, Los Angeles, is reached the next morning. From the 26th to the 1st the team has opportunity to scrimmage on the field at Pasadena...
...recognized racial or geographic limits; as the fate of the Mayor of Omaha forcibly reminds us. Hundreds of white men in this country have been victims of lawlessness and mob violence; it was the lynching of a Montana labor leader that called forth President Wilson's utterance of July 26th. It cannot be confined to the South: excluding New England there is not a single section of the Union which has not been the scene of at least one lynching in the past 22 years. The evil is national in range and scope; the nation must provide the remedy...
...Joel E. Goldthwait M.D. '90, president of the Robert Bent Brigham Hospital on Parker Hill, Roxbury, and formerly attached to the 26th Division of Infantry overseas, has been awarded the Distinguished Service Medal. He is one of the most prominent orthopedic surgeons of the country, and at present is on duty at the Elks' Reconstruction Hospital...
Several University men in the 26th Division have been decorated for bravery on the field of battle. Among these are three men who won the Distinguished Service Cross: Captain Cornelius Beard '09, Co. A, 101 Engineers; Capt. Conrad Wesselhoeft M.D. '17, Medical Corps, 104th Infantry; and Corporal William J. Brown '14, Co. C, 101st Signal Corps. The last two named, together with Major H. W. Estey, D.D.M. '97, 101st Engineers, were also awarded the Croix de Guerre...
...college authorities have exhibited a great deal of sagacity in declaring a holiday on April 25th, the day of the parade of the 26th Division. Perhaps this is putting the cart before the horse, for, judging by the class-rooms on the day of Wilson's visit to Boston-a few ambitions scholars would be the only signs of college life in Cambridge...