Word: flooded
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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Treasurer.--Henry Ludwig Flood Kreger, of Fairfield...
Marshals. William John Bingham, Methuen.David Percy Morgan, New York, N. Y. Wells Blanchard, Concord. Henry Lamb Nash, Newton. Clifford Frederick Farrington, Cambridge. Ernest William Soucy, Forest Hills. Edward William Mahan, Natick. Donald Clark Watson, Milton. Richard Norris Williams, 2d, Cambridge. Treasurer. William Cowper Boyden, Jr., Winnetka, Ill. Henry Ludwig Flood Kreger, Fairfield, Me. Samuel Morse Felton, Jr., Chicago, Ill. Francis Grover Cleveland O'Neill, St. Louis, Mo. Orator. Henry Epstein, Brooklyn, N. Y. Paul Lombard Sayre, Chicago, Ill. John Gilpin Heyburn, Louisville, Ky. Robert Hewins Stiles, Fitchburg. Donald Joseph Wallace, Los Angeles, Cal. Ivy Orator. Poet. Evan Howell Foreman, Atlanta...
...tentative cast, with the men's parts taken by members of the University and the women's parts by Radcliffe students; follow: Pamela, Eleanor H. Jones 1917 Hugo von Muller R. T. Bushnell '19 Colonel "Billy" Parkman, W. H. Roope '16 Carol King, Constance Flood 1916 Major Lafayette-Rose, J. C. Scott 1G. Judith Lafayette-Rose, Christine Hayes 1908 Mrs. Jerome Asquith, Marion Graves 1918 Donald MacPherson, First Lieut., G. A. Collier '18 Edward Clarke, Second Lieut., H. B. Craig '19 Mrs. Burton, Hester W. Browne 1916 Ruth Burton, Elizabeth S. Allen 1917 Colonel David Hillis, J. W. D. Seymour...
...members of the University are invited to a meeting for the discussion of military preparedness under the auspices of the Radcliffe Civics Club at Agassiz House this afternoon at 4.30 o'clock. Constance Flood, Radcliffe '16, will preside and Professor Copeland will introduce the speakers. Dr. E. H. Gruening '07, of the Boston Traveler; D. D. L. McGrew '03, of the Boston Journal and secretary of the Massachusetts Security League, and W. A. Green '04, of the Boston Journal, will give their views on the necessity for greater preparedness...
...large quantity of fresh water was pumped into the tank each day; and that a proper amount of chemicals was regularly placed in the tank to destroy, possible germs. I verified this through the Y. M. C. A. and learned, furthermore, that they had, as an experiment, attempted to flood the tank, but failed to pump water fast enough to overcome the displacement of the drainage tubes, which, incidentally, were neither broken nor in the habit of becoming stopped up. R. A. WHITING '16, Manager of the University Swimming Association...