Word: states
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...Corporation as editor of the University Directory, and he plans to compile and maintain a list of all living University men, with their addresses for the general use of the College and its graduates. The entire work is being done for the Alumni Association. Gain Total United States Army 301 1997 Harvard R. O. T. C. and other military bodies 70 917 Foreign Armies 9 122 United States Navy 60 713 Medical Service 71 591 Red Cross and other relief work 36 229 Ambulance Service 59 420 National, state, and other committee work 55 498 Miscellaneous...
...Board of Overseers of the University have just announced the Visiting Committees for the coming year. Among the new names found on this list are those of Major General Leonard Wood, M. D., '84, and Assistant Secretary of State F. D. Roosevelt '04, whose names appear on the Committee on Military Science and Tactics; W. C. Forbes '92, Ex-Governor of the Philippines on the Committee to visit the Botanic Garden; C. L. Freer, of Detroit, Michigan, on the Committee to visit the Fogg Art Museum and Division of Fine Arts; Judge F. J. Swayze '79, of the Supreme Court...
...Haughton '99, Capt. C. A. Coolidge '17, and Capt. G. H. Hoban, a former All-American player from Dartmouth, are learning the rudiments of the game, and later in the season should make formidable aggregations. At Westfield and other camps in the middle and western part of the state preparation for the season is already well under way. From Westfield, the 1st Maine Heavy Artillery is to send a team against the informal University in Cambridge. In this regiment are many natural athletes from the farms and woods of Maine, who need only coaching such as W. T. Gardiner...
...McCarthy's arm has caused more sorrow in New York than the partial success of the Germans on the Baltic front, whereas Felsch's home-run has cheered Chicago more than any English victory in Flanders. To a foreigner this may seem to be a dreadful and unpatriotic state of affairs, but we know better. We are living in a period of universal sadness and a tonic like the World Series is a good thing. It is indeed a case of "making merry, for tomorrow...
When intensely centralized athletics have been abandoned for athletics which open the field to everyone, may we not think that after the war the return to the old form may meet with some disfavor? If the present state of things is more beneficial in war, it is probable this would also be true in peace...