Word: editor
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...Magill, Dartmouth '16, editor-in-chief of "The Dartmouth," was in Cambridge on Saturday to examine the details of organization of the Regiment, and the features of the system which made it a success. The Dartmouth Battalion attracted much interest when it was first formed, but for various reasons, especially since the faculty decided to allow three hours credit towards a degree for attendance at the Plattsburg camp, the enrolment has fallen to about thirty. These men are now working on extended order drill, and skirmishing drills in hilly country. A signal corps, distinct from the regular battalion, has been...
...CRIMSON takes great pleasure in announcing the election of Edward Allen Whitney, of Augusta, Me., of the Junior class, as president; of William Henry Meeker, of New York, N. Y., of the Junior class, as managing editor; of William Darrah Kelley, 3d, of Chattanooga, Tenn., of the Junior class, as business manager; of William Richmond, Jr., of Little Compton, R. I., of the Sophomore class, as secretary...
...CRIMSON also takes great pleasure in announcing the election of Wallace Fleming, of New York, N. Y., of the Junior class, as an editorial editor; of Robert Hale Garrison, of Brookline, of Franklin Eddy Parker, Jr., of Bay City, Mich., of David Mason Little, Jr., of Salem, and of Philip Newbold Rhinelander, of Lawrence, L. I., N. Y., all of the Sophomore class, and of Hugh Bridgman, of Salem, and of Chester William Cook, of Worcester, both of the Freshman class, as news editors...
...president of the CRIMSON; F. G. C. O'Neill '16, business manager of the CRIMSON; E. H. Foreman '16; H. Wentworth '17, president of the Lampoon; L. P. Mansfield '16, former president of the Lampoon; H. A. Larrabee '16, former president of the Illustrated; M. A. DeW. Howe '87, editor of the Alumni Bulletin; and R. S. Mitchell 1G., president of the Monthly...
...Deutscher Verein, Dramatic Club, Speakers' Club, Cosmopolitan Club, and many others of a like nature, could center their activities in the Union under the proposed system. The unfortunate effects of the keen competition of these many societies are seen many times. For instance, on April 8, M. Leroux, the editor of the "Paris Matin" and one of the most brilliant men of France today, spoke at the Union. He was in America engaged on a special mission to President Wilson. On the same evening, Mayor Curley spoke in Emerson Hall under the auspices of the Speakers' Club. This...