Word: stationer
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Plans for a season of increased activity and interest are now being completed by the University Wireless Club. During the fall, the club's apparatus and effects have been moved from the Union to new quarters on the lower floor of Westmorely. The new station, which is reached by a special entrance on Bow street, is being fitted up as a comfortable club room where files of the leading radio periodicals and pictures of other stations and apparatus may be found. It is planned to have a series of meetings here, with talks by men prominent in the radio...
Before the war, the club was little but a relay station and the plans for its development which began with a series of lectures by men prominent in radio activities, were blocked by the enlistment of the majority of its members in the radio service. With its now station and apparatus, its progressive plans, and with a number of members, including several commercial operators, however, the club now looks forward to a period, of renewed growth...
Although he entered the College in 1918, Kane enrolled as a second-class seaman in the Naval Reserve Force in July and was assigned to the Great Lakes Training Station. Later, however, he was transferred to the Naval Aviation Detachment and then to the Harvard Marine Unit as a private, and discharged on December...
...from the four quarters of the country so that he may converse with them on problems and policies before he assumes leadership of the United States. No doubt one is dismayed at the thought of Elihu Root buying his ticket home as William Jennings Bryan alights on the station platform. Mr. Harding must be overwhelmed with ideas and suggestions as different as their originators. Yet there can be no doubt as to the value of hearing all sides of important questions; and it is far better to hear each opinion separately, with a breathing space between, than to hear them...
...arrival late this morning, Mr. Sullivan will be met at the Back Bay station by a reception committee representing the Union and the University, which will escort him to the Harvard Club, where a room has been reserved for him. Accompanied by this committee, Mr. Sullivan will then proceed to Cambridge for a luncheon to be given in his honor by the Signet Society at 1 o'clock...