Word: americans
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...questioned by those interested in positions in the Far East with the Standard Oil Company. The posts open are strongly recommended to graduate students or undergraduates, who are qualified, by Dean Gay, of the Business School. The Standard Oil Company is, according to his statement, the only one of American big business corporations to have completely organized its foreign marketing facilities. The Singer Sewing Machine Company is practically the only rival to the concern in eastern lands...
...Public Speaking, today between 2 and 5 o'clock. The competition, which is the second annual event of its kind, will be held in Sanders Theatre on March 30. It is open to Sophomores, Juniors, and Seniors. Each contestant will speak James Rodman Drake's "Address to the American Flag." The prizes will be $25, $15, and $10. Candidates names must be handed in at Holden Chapel...
...second annual contest in speaking for the Lee Wade II prizes will be held in Sanders Theatre on March 30. The contest is open to Sophomores, Juniors, and Seniors. Each contestant will speak James Rodman Drake's "Address to the American Flag." The prizes will be $25, $15, and $10. All who wish to enter the competition should give their names to Mr. C. W. Chenoweth on Tuesday, March 14, between 2 and 5 o'clock...
...committee has been formed under the direction of the Special Aid Society for American Preparedness to help men to attend Plattsburg this summer who otherwise would be unable to go. This committee is headed by Mrs. Robert W. Lovett of Boston, and numbers among its members the following undergraduates; Wells Blanchard '16, F. B. Lund '18, H. Coolidge '19, and L. A. Morgan...
...medical profession, concerning which Dean Bradford of the Medical School writes today, has been raised in prestige and attractiveness. Ten years ago the practice of medicine was flooded by members of ill-prepared medical graduates; and the profession was forced to take matters in its own hands. Through the American Medical Association a publicity campaign was undertaken, which drove the incomplete school out of existence and raised the standard of the profession to its modern status. The Association required at first that medical students should have a college degree; but this was unsatisfactory, on account of the varied significance...