Word: cosmopolitanism
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...first annual dinner of the Cosmopolitan Club will be held in the Trophy Room of the Union Friday evening at 7 o'clock. About seventy-five members of the club and their invited guests will attend. Owing to a previous engagement, President Eliot will be unable to be present throughout the dinner, but is expected to arrive for the latter part of the evening. During the dinner Kanrich's orchestra will render a specially prepared program of cosmopolitan music. Following is the list of speakers and their subjects: J. D. Greene '96, "The Cosmopolitan at Harvard"; Mr. E. B. Drew...
...first annual dinner of the Cosmopolitan Club will be held in the Trophy Room of the Union Friday evening, May 29, at 7 o'clock. Invitations have been sent to President Eliot, Professor Lowell, Professor Munsterberg, several of the consular representatives of foreign nations resident at Boston; and other distinguished men. Tickets at $1.75 each may be obtained by members of the club by application to the secretary, F. S. Montgomery '08, or to H. von Kaltenborn '09, Grays 13, T. L. Chao '09, 45 Trowbridge street, or J. L. Derby '08, Beck...
...Churchill was graduated from the Naval Academy at Annapolis in 1894; The same year he became an editor of the Army and Navy Journal of New York, and the next year was elected managing editor of the Cosmopolitan Magazine. He was a member of the New Hampshire Legislature from 1903 to 1905 and in 1906 was the candidate of the Lincoln Republican Club; on a reform platform, for Governor of New Hampshire. He is a member of the Union and Century Clubs of New York, of the Union and Century Clubs of New York, of the Union and the Tennis...
With the election of officers last evening the Cosmopolitan Club started on its interesting and useful career. It will fill a long-felt want. The average foreigner has been all too likely to become an outsider in everything but name, through no fault of his own and no fault of the other students. The foreigner, with different points of view, has not been encouraged to approach his American classmates, whose ideas and ideals he cannot altogether understand. The undergraduates on the other land have become absorbed in their own interests and overlooked the presence of those who have come...
...Cosmopolitan Club there is now a common meeting place, where the members--now two-thirds foreign and one-third American--may, with mutual benefit, be put in touch with each other. At Cornell the Cosmopolitan Club has proved its usefulness and attained the popularity it deserves. We hope and fully expect that here, where the possibilities are so great, the society, although perhaps not much in the public eye, will grow steadily in usefulness, scope and power...