Word: abroad
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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Thomas Savage Bowles '12, of Boston, died of pneumonia in Nuremberg, Germany, on August 14. His death came as a great shock to his friends as his entire illness lasted but a week. He had been traveling abroad during the vacation and had been in good health throughout the trip. The sickness was a result of exposure during mountain-climbing in Switzerland. Bowles prepared for College at Noble's School...
...this evening at 8 o'clock. J. S. Reed '10 will be toastmaster. The speakers and their subjects are as follows: H. von Kaltenborn '09, "The Cosmopolitan Movement"; Professor W. H. Schofield '93, "The University and the Foreigner"; Dr. Gilbert Reed, "China"; Prince Selim Senudah, of Egypt, "The Cosmopolitan Abroad." During the dinner a cosmopolitan entertainment will be given by members of the club...
While in College, Mr. Greene was president of the CRIMSON, and sang on both the Freshman and University Glee Clubs. After his graduation, he spent a year abroad and afterwards went to the Law School for two years. Until 1901 he was associated with the University Press, and edited the Harvard Bulletin; in that year he accepted the position of secretary to President Eliot, which he held for four years, resigning in order to accept his present position. Three years ago he was also made a member of the University Council...
...Green, the second Yale speaker, submitted the policy which the first speaker for the affirmative had only touched upon briefly--the system of subsidies--which he said would offset the greater cost of building and operating ships here than abroad. Moreover, by making the subsidy for each ship pro- portional to the amount of cargo which it carries, American vessels will be induced to carry as much as they can and as often as they can, and to outdo foreign rivals. A system such as this is analogous to the one which the United States employed in building...
...about the desirability of which men differ, but of prolonged drunkenness, which all sane men agree is bad. This time the drunkenness was on a public occasion, not in Cambridge, but in Boston, under the eyes of the newspaper reporters, who are only too eager to seize and spread abroad scandal about any large college. The Polo Club has wronged the Freshman class and the College in the public eye. Why the College and the class should be the only ones to suffer, and the Polo Club, as such, get off scot-free is not clear...