Word: southerners
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...Samuel A. Green '51, of Boston, has recently presented to the Peabody Museum a valuable collection of Indian relics. The collection, to which Dr. Green gave a great part of his life, consists of stone implements unearthed in Massachusetts and southern New Hampshire, Indian adz-blades, axes, scrapers, soapstone vessels, pottery fragments, and the stone points of spears and arrows. Many of the specimens were found near Dr. Green's home at Groton, Mass. Several came from Norton, Concord, Martha's Vineyard, Webster, Cambridge, and from Teverton, R. I. Most of the implements are relics of the Algonquins...
...military force and equipment, this fear seems unnecessarily exaggerated. The University will be termed reactionary by very few for supporting a camp which the government considers of value in the maintaining of an army, for with Mexican intervention imminent, and a standng force too small even to patrol our southern borderline, very few will feel that the United States over-emphasizes the military...
...university team to do so later on in the month. Seven members of last year's regular team are in college this year, and will be eligible for the team this spring. The baseball schedule for this spring comprises 27 regular games. The season will open with a southern trip of five games, the first being played in Norfolk, Va., on April...
...citizenship placed on a personal basis, and not on one of race color. He suggested that the United States allow from any one country only five per cent of the number already naturalized to come in during a year. This would restrict to a small extent the immigration from southern Europe, and would reduce all immigration to a minimum. This five per cent rule would apply only to those who came here for the purpose of making a living, and not to students, tourists, or lecturers. Mr. Gulick's plan also includes registration for aliens and an educational bureau...
...ninth annual Junior Dance was given in the Union last night by the class of 1915. In every respect the occasion was a great success. The entire ground floor was given up to the guests. The Living Room, bordered by palms and with an open fire in the southern fireplace, was used for dancing. The Hall, Dining Room, Periodical Room Card Room, and Reading Room were arranged with boxes separated by screens of palms, ferns, and spruce. The rooms were hung with festoons of laurel and smilax, to which were attached rows of Japanese lanterns...