Word: americans
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...special interest activities in the University will be glad to note the recrudescence of the Wireless Club. This time the organization has struck a vein of new enthusiasm for radio telegraphy; it has the support of research students at the Cruft Laboratory, is to become a member of the American Radio Relay League, and to do some actual experimental work in the receiving and sending of messages. If successful, the Wireless Club will present a worthy example of what can be done in developing serious interests on undergraduate initiative...
...clock. Dr. Richard C. Cabot '89, Professor W. E. Hocking '01, Professor Josiah Royce hon. '11, and Mr. William Roscoe Thayer '81, former editor of the Graduates Magazine, will be the speakers. Patriotic songs will be sung, and a collection will be taken in aid of the American Ambulance Service in France. This meeting has been called by the "American Rights Committee," which includes in its membership a large number of graduates of the University...
...years that the Business School has existed, it has already gained the respect and confidence of many business houses throughout the country. One large South American exporting company in New York has made a standing agreement to take two of the School's graduates of high standing each year, and give them positions either in New York or in their South American branches. Many New England firms have been only too glad to offer their plants as laboratories for the research work of second-year men. Other firms, alive to the superiority of Business School graduates over the ordinary college...
...bottom the only ground for mutual understanding must be intellectual; and to the failure to appreciate this fact must be attributed the slow growth of Pan-Americanism in the wider sense. Most Americans have never even considered the possibility of the existence of large and influential universities in the South. As Professor Lima says in an interview which the CRIMSON prints today, the intercourse of the southern universities has been almost exclusively with the institutions of Europe. America has gone her own way in ignorance of and indifference to the intellectual and economic growth of South America. Harvard has already...
...obtained the interview with Professor Lima. It is encouraging to note his optimism in regard to feasibility of the plan. "The great universities of the other countries of the southern continent as well as the Faculties of Brazil, would be anxious to help, if the United States would send American professors in return." It would seem to be Harvard's move...