Word: germanic
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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Another Boche aviator has been accounted for by D. E. Putnam '20, according to a dispatch received from France. This latest achievement makes the third German that Putnam has shot down since his arrival on the battle front two months ago. Putnam and others of his fellow airmen in the Lafayette Escadrille, have been taking advantage on the recent mild weather on the French front and have continued their brilliant exploits by bringing down three enemy machines in all, losing none themselves...
Coincident with Putnam's feat, Thomas Hitchcock, Jr., also of the Escadrille, downed two German aviators within a short time, his first victories in the air. Details of these combats have not yet been received in Paris. Both Hitchcock and Putnam have been on the battle front for less than three months and have not yet been transferred to the American Army...
...Anthropology 2, Peabody Mus. Astronomy 2a, Astron. Lab. Chemistry B, Emerson D Chemistry 23, Emerson D Class. Archaeology 1a, Emerson F Economics 4a, Harvard 5 Education 12a, Emerson A English 41: Anderson to Harwood (inclusive), Harvard 2 Henderson to Yont (inclusive), Harvard 2 French 1 I, II, Emerson J German 8, Emerson A Government 4, Zool. Lect. Rm. Greek B II, Emerson D History 7, Emerson J History 14, Emerson G Italian 1, Harvard 3 Italian 10, Harvard 2 Mathematics C III, Zool. Lect. Rm. Mathematics 17, Harvard 2 Mineralogy 12, Mineral. Lab. Music 5, Emerson A Philosophy 9, Emerson...
...Paris. Annually he longs for the life of the Quartier Latin, and annually he is forced to spend the summer months commuting from Russia to France. But the old game of war is not as amusing as formerly, the Bolsheviki refuse to go near the Mazurian Lakes, and the German people is loth to waste any more good nails on a wooden image of the Kaiser's right-hand...
...become the greatest among the Supermen is to win a bigger victory than any other general. Von Buelow now leads the competition, thanks to the Italian retreat, and Von Hindenberg has to act quickly or go the way of Von Kluck and the other old-timers. When a German general is worried as to the next move he either writes a proclamation thanking God and the soldiers for help received and promising more victories with no casualty lists, or he mentions the idea of moving right on to Paris. The latter method is apparently more fashionable this year...