Word: embark
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...undertake the far-sighted activities so vaguely sketched in Mr. Sweezy's statement. Professor Holcombe, President of the other body, has stated that the Association is enough for the older men, but that the Union is needed to satisfy the aspirations of the younger. Hence the Union must embark on its youthful aims. We must hear more of the connections with the Cambridge Central Labor Union and with kindred associations. We must hear more of self-education for the members, and of erecting bulwarks against the possible advent of such evils as Fascism. Otherwise the Cambridge Union of University Teachers...
...Cambridge side of the river is the Weld Boat House which is used by scullers who have at their disposal over 70 singles, narrow and broad comps, and wherries. The House crews also embark from Weld but the Varsity and Freshman crews use the Newell boat house which is on the Soldiers Field side of the river and contains the majority of the 36 eights used by the Crimson oarsmen...
...morning last week dressy little Roy W. Howard, board chairman of the Scripps-Howard newspapers, was in San Francisco about to embark on a trip around the world. Just before he went aboard the S. S. President Coolidge he was handed a letter from the President of the U. S. About the same time, on the other side of the continent, Presidential Secretary Steve Early was handing out to the Press at Hyde Park the same letter, together with one Mr. Howard had previously written his good Friend Franklin Roosevelt. When this exchange of correspondence was headlined up & down...
...Cambridge side of the river is the Weld Boat House which is used by scullers who have at their disposal over 70 singles, narrow and broad comps, and wherries. The House crews also embark from Weld but the Varsity and Freshman crews use the Newell boat house which is on the Soldiers Field side of the river and contains the majority of the 36 eights used by the Crimson oarsmen...
...more prominent correspondents whose dispatches would be considered proof that he had said what he was going to say. This was nothing less than a verbal declaration of war on Ethiopia, delivered from the top of a cannon at Salerno to troops as they were about to embark. On the way to Salerno the flying Dictator who piloted his own plane passed through an electric storm. Lightning charges collected on the wireless antennae, shocked the radio operator into a faint, but the big trimotored ship roared safely on. Amateur correspondents reported that Benito Mussolini said...