Word: foreign
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...attempt to bridge over the gap between theoretical training and practical business needs, the National City Bank of New York has arranged a practical course of education for foreign banking commerce. The bank plans to employ a limited number of college men each year from Harvard, Yale, Princeton. New York University, Columbia, Cornell, and Pennsylvania. In addition arrangement is contemplated by which the plan will be extended to certain western institutions as well...
After a brief and decidedly unfriendly interchange of notes, diplomatic relations between the CRIMSON and the Lampoon have been broken off. Count Ibis, Lampian ambassador to the Court of St. Plympton, last Monday presented to the CRIMSON Foreign Secretary for Hockey a message, the tone of which utterly shattered all rules of international etiquette. The Kaiser of all the Crimsons, while regretting that he was thus forced into hostilities, answered immediately with a declaration of war. Count Ibis was given his passports yesterday morning, and a mobilization of the Crimson forces was begun at once...
...February number of the Monthly does not loss in interest though it presents a surprising contrast to the "Pagan" issue of last month. The figures and sentiments of antiquity no longer flit through its pages; they are replaced by comparatively modern and sordid actualities; like the U. S. Foreign Policy, the "Movie" and the Theatre and the Harvard Regiment. The prevailing note of the number is non-fictional; indeed, the only serious criticism that can be brought against the Monthly of 1916 is the absence of anything particularly creative in the realm of the short story...
...Reniers concludes his article on the moving Picture in this issue. Though a little slow-moving, it is clearly patterned and has been written with pains. The "Agrippina" of Mr. Lyman Dudley lacks what so many historical productions lack,--a sense of atmosphere. Mr. Burrows' article on our foreign policy is youthful and sincere, and (so far as it goes) arrestingly written. We prefer Mr. C. G. Paulding's short editorial on the late General Huerta to his longer article. Brief, bitter, and to the point, it reveals, like so much of the writer's other work, a personality which...
States represented by four or more men: 1912- 1913- 1914- 1915- 1913 1914 1915 1916 New England, 50 51 71 69 Middle Atlantic States, 14 16 25 26 Middle Western States, 19 24 31 51 Western States, 9 7 11 16 Southern States, 10 9 10 12 Foreign, 5 6 9 7 -- -- -- -- Total no of men, 107 113 148 182 No. of colleges represented, 42 46 62 72 1912- 1913- 1914- 1915- 1913 1914 1915 1916 Arkansas, 4 California, 6 5 Colorado, 4 Illinois, 6 7 10 Indiana, 5 4 9 Iowa, 5 Maine, 5 6 Massachusetts...