Word: changing
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...members of the class who have married: Walter Amory, to Elizabeth Lowell Hancock Cole, August 25, 1923; Aaron Morsey Angenitzky, to Rebecca E. Cherkassky, March 14, 1922; Dominick Bianchi, to Edith Tarossj, August 19, 1922; Thomas Morrison Carnegie Jr., to Dorothy Duncan, June 26, 1922; Tung Liang Chang, to Suzanne Wang; Charles Cary Colt, to Amy Lee, December 4, 1923; Thomas Roscoe Conklin, to Jane Elizabeth Waters, June 28, 1923; Newcomb Fuller, to Pauline Eddy, December 29, 1923; Lloyd Francis Harris, to Dorothy Harriet Daniels, June 12, 1923; Walter Hamor Piston, to Kathryn Nason, September 14, 1920; Otto Frank Reis...
...invests in a buried bone. A peasant invests in a silver filled stocking. A fool invests in wildcat stock. But a Manchurian War Lord invests in munitions. Chang Tso-Lin, sitting at Mukden, took inventory of his assets. He decided to diversify and strengthen his holdings by new purchases. He prepared for Spring "maneuvers." So he bought a shipload of French munitions. He tried to buy a few warehouses full of Italian arms which were encumbering the vicinity of Peking, but negotiations fell through so he sent to Holland and bought a big shipment of arms that was stranded there...
Under the leadership of Hon. Chang Chien Jr., son of the man who introduced modern industrial methods into China, a party of Chinese observers will visit Harvard this morning. The eight members of the Commission, which is primarily industrial in its interests, will be received by President Lowell at 10 o'clock in the Faculty Room at University Hall...
Present at the speakers' table were: the Rev. Dr. J. Leighton Stuart, President of Peking University; Ziang-ling Chang, Chinese Consul General in Manhattan; Tsannyoen Philip Sze, Chinese Vice Consul General in Manhattan; Mrs. Finley J. Shepard and Miss Susie Sorabji of India, dressed in a red flowing robe and a red veil, her native costume...
...first President of the Chinese Republic was Yuan Shih-Kai, 1913-16; second, Li Yuan-Hung, when he retired on account of a restoration of the Monarchy; third, Peng Kwo-Chang, 1917-18 ; fourth, Hsu Shih-Chang, 1918-22 ; Li Yuan-Hung resumed the Presidency at the request of old Parliamentarians on June 11, 1922 and remained in office until last June...