Word: portsmouth
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...Cooney, '14 g. 22 210 5.11 Exeter T. H. Cornell, '15 h.b. 22 162 5.7 Exeter C. M. Gile, '14 e. 22 169 6.0 Andover A. McLeish, '15 h.b. 21 165 5.8 Hotchkiss D. Markle, '14S. h.b. 21 159 5.6 Hill H. A. Marting, '14 c. 21 178 5.8 Portsmouth H.S. E. J. Madden, '14S. t. 23 180 5.11 Hotchkiss H. A. Pumpelly, '15 f.b. 23 182 5.8 Hotchkiss J. S. Pendleton, '14S. t. 24 188 5.11 Hitchkiss N. S. Talbot, '14S. t. 21 189 6.1 Hotchkiss W. C. Warren, '14 t. 21 190 6.2 Hill H. J. Wiser...
...advocate of universal peace. His works include books on historical themes, outdoor life, big game hunting, and a number of magazine articles dealing with these and other subjects ranging even as far as Irish folk-lore. Owing to his diplomatic treatment of the Russian and Japanese delegates to the Portsmouth Peace Conference in 1905, he received the Nobel Peace Prize of $40,000 with which he endowed the Foundation for the Promotion of Industrial Peace. In 1902 Colonel Roosevelt was given the degree of LL.D. by the University...
...Marting '14, centre, prepared at Portsmouth High. He has been on the squad one year is 20 years old, 5 feet, 10 inches tall, and weighs 177 pounds...
...following committee has been appointed by H.L. Gaddis, first marshal of the Senior class, to take charge of the arrangements for the Senior picnic, to be held on Friday, May 24: T.S. Ross, of Hingham, chairman; Y. Aral, of Riverside, Conn; H.T. Deane, of Chicago, III.; F. Gooding, of Portsmouth, N.H.; O.W. Haussermann, of Evansville, Ind.; W.H. Lacey, of Wollaston; C.M. Storey, of Boston, and W.P. Tobey, of Boston. The same committee will have the functions of the senior entertainment committee...
...history, the Russian-Japanese war, which threatened two great nations with destruction and drew into the quarrel many others. There was not any precedence for interfering, but the result justified the act. Roosevelt was not a breaker of precedence but a maker of precedence. The treaty of Portsmouth, the outcome of Theodore Roosevelt's own efforts, raised the prestige of the American nation to a position commanding greater respect and recognition among the nations of the world than ever before attained...