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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...Alaska; Bernard Sheridan Cogan of Stoneham, Joseph Morgan Cooper of Syracuse. N. Y.; Charles Kimball Cummings, Jr., of Boston; Louis De Jonge of Fitchburg, John Dempsey of Boston, Francis Fiske of Needham, Joseph Milton Hartley of Fairmount, West Va.; Alexander Haven Ladd, Jr., of Milton, Charles Carroll Lee of New York, N. Y.; George Owen, Jr., of Newton, Langdon Ward Post of Bayport, Long Island, N. Y.; Francis Rouillard of Chicope Falls, Edward Gillette Selden of Andover, Marion Wesley Self of Abilene, Texas; Walter keith Shaw of Concord, Duncan Forbes Thayer of Lancaster, Phillip Elder Wilson of Gloucester, Willis Brown...
...Tuesday night, November 25, the club will hold a banquet in the Union, at which Lieutenant-Colonell Leonard. H. Drennan, officer in charge of the Air Service Department of the Northeast, and Godfrey L. Cabot '82, President of the Aero Club of New England, will be the chief speakers...
...new policy for conducting the Endowment Fund Campaign in Greater Boston has just been adopted by the committee in charge. Instead of soliciting subscriptions according to occupations, henceforth the burden of completing the city's quota of $6,000,000 will fall upon the class organization of the district...
...Rhodes Scholar I wish to protest gently against some of the suggestions of the editorial entitled "Rhodes Scholars Old and New." That "hitherto American Rhodes Scholars were not a great success at Oxford" and that the "Yankee" at Oxford has not been truly representative of the best that America can produce, are two assumptions which I doubt if you are entitled to make, however little I may be in a position gracefully to repute them. If you are under the impression that recent writings in the Atlantic Monthly give you authority, a less cursory reading of those articles will answer...
...difference of opinion. Both heretofore and now the number of Rhodes men at Oxford at one time has been normally two from each state; the scholarships are for three years, and one man is appointed from each state two years out of every three. And there has been no new ruling to prevent the appointment of unworthy candidates; such a ruling always existed. The Rhodes Trust, it seems to me, has not shown any such lack of confidence in former methods or former scholars as you suggest. Would it be discourteous to point out that they have all evidence...