Word: portlands
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...that defeated M. I. T. at the B. A. A. meet will oppose Williams in a relay race. The University team originally expected to meet Dartmouth also in the relay, but owing to a misunderstanding, the Green runners will not compete. Williams defeated Bowdoin, the conquerors of Yale, at Portland Monday night when Foster, Bowdoin anchor, lost his footing after gaining a commanding lead. Coach Farrell welcomes the race as a good test for the team in preparation for the triangular meet with Dartmouth and Cornell on February...
...Cooke '26 of New York City was elected president of the Lampoon at a meeting of the board last night. Other elections resulted as follows: Robert Cloury Roebling '26 of Washington, D. C., Ibis; Lemment Upham Harris '26 of Tuxedo Park. New York, treasurer; Edward Walker Marshall '26 of Portland, Maine, secretary; Samuel Dodd Richards '27 of St. Louis, Missouri, assistant treasurer; William Potter '27, of Boston; assistant secretary; Robert McCulla English '26 of Brookline, chairman of the fiftieth anniversary book; and Hiram Francis Mills '27 of Norwell, fiftieth anniversary board...
Lewis Hyman Weinstein '27 of Portland, Maine, and Irving Jay Fain '27 of Providence, Rhode Island, have been appointed second assistant managers of the debating team. Fain is to have charge of the class debates. These appointments are subject to the approval of the Debating Council...
...official relay station of the University Wireless Club on top of the Stadium. Yesterday evening the club station, IXJ-IAF, operating with a 75-meter set, got into communication with British 2 CN, a station in Falmouth, England, and at its request it relayed a message to 7SP in Portland, Ore. Thus two stations 6000 miles apart were linked with a comparatively few minutes by the club station, which has done more work in the last two days than in had during the last two years in the old location. Members of the Wireless Club hope soon to get into...
Another college has been drawn back from the path of Bolshevism by the enlightened authority of a board of regents. Reed College, in Portland, Oregon, accused of dalliance with progressive ideas, has been most happily snatched back to salvation. The death of Richard Scholz, its late president, gave the opportunity for the business interests of Portland, entrenched in the regents board, to deflect the college from its doubtful toying with ideas. The new president, Mr. Norman Coleman, was leader of the war time movement to oust the I. W. W. from mines and lumber camps. He is a stalwart defender...