Word: globe
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...evening will be President Lowell, Honorable Franklin D. Roosevelt '04, Assistant Secretary of the Navy, Mr. Lawrence Perry, for forty years editor of the sporting columns of the New York Evening Post, Mr. James T. Williams, Jr., editor of the Transcript, Mr. W. D. Sullivan, of the Boston Globe, Professor C. T. Copeland '82, Mr. M. A. DeWolfe Howe '87, Dean C. N. Greenough '98, Mr. Matthew Luce...
...Keith's, Beach 1724 Majestic, Beach 4520 Opera House, Beach 4520 Park Square, Beach 193 Plymouth, Beach 4520 Shubert, Beach 4520 Symphony Hall, Back Bay 1492 Tremont, Beach 608 Wilbur, Beach 4520 Boston Papers. Associated Press, Fort Hill 400 Boston Daily Advertiser, Beach 7520 Boston American, Main 5180 Boston Globe, Main 5721 Boston Herald, Beach 3000 Boston Post, Main 1004 & 7400 Boston Record, Main 2470 Boston Transcript, Main 6950 Boston Traveler, Beach 3000 CAMBRIDGE. General. Co-operative Society, Camb. 6580 Co-operative Branch, Camb. 141 Crimson Printing Co., Camb. 3390 Electric Light Co., Camb. 1170 Express. American, Haymarket 4400 Anderson...
...conditions at the present time? We are now about five times nearer Europe owing to improved transportation facilities. We have acquired interests in Alaska, the Hawaiian Islands and the Philippines which must be protected. Our commerce, oftentimes carried in foreign-owned ships, penetrates to nearly every corner of the globe. In the growing interdependence of nations and their closer contact with one another, our country has by no means remained isolated; the nations of Europe were not at war three years when the United States was drawn into the conflict. World peace is no longer a provincial concern, its violation...
...precepts of their training expressed so eloquently by Lowell in his "Commemoration Ode" were followed again by Harvard men in the World War. They rushed into the service in all parts of the globe, willingly sacrificing themselves for an ideal. And now when peace is here the University is showing her versatility by immediately adjusting herself once more to the ways of peace. Her sons are returning filled with the desire of serving their country vigorously in other fields than that of war. They face the future with the spirit of James Russell Lowell...
This is the first of a series of six lectures arranged by the Phillips Brooks House Association for Harvard men. The second lecture, a week from tomorrow, will be a discussion of the Irish problem by James F. Sullivan of the Boston Globe...