Word: succession
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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Since receiving his honorable discharge as a first lieutenant in the Motor Transport Corps, Mr. Galaid has returned to his former civil profession and has been devoting himself especially to the new field of airplane photography with marked success. In addition to the pictures of the University, he has taken a number of excellent views of Camp Devens, and of the buildings at M. I. T. and Brown and Yale Universities. The notable clearness of Mr. Galaid's pretures is due to a special secret process which he has himself developed...
...past years the Gym teams have met with great success, and have been very popular. Meets with Amherst, Dartmouth, Yale, and the Intercollegiate Meet have been held regularly. Exhibitions have also been given at the leading preparatory schools, and interscholastic meets have been held in Cambridge under the auspices of the University team. This year plans are being made to resume all these activities...
...Rhodes Scholar I wish to protest gently against some of the suggestions of the editorial entitled "Rhodes Scholars Old and New." That "hitherto American Rhodes Scholars were not a great success at Oxford" and that the "Yankee" at Oxford has not been truly representative of the best that America can produce, are two assumptions which I doubt if you are entitled to make, however little I may be in a position gracefully to repute them. If you are under the impression that recent writings in the Atlantic Monthly give you authority, a less cursory reading of those articles will answer...
Already this year the Harvard Clubs have given a dual concert with Princeton at Princeton the eve of the Tiger game. This proved a great success, and all indications point to an even greater popularity at the Yale concert. The program will embrace songs and instrumental pieces by both of the universities, interspersed with specialty numbers...
...killing of four veterans of the World War of Centralia, Washington, was not only dastardly, it was, for the success of the I. W. W. movement, exceedingly unwise. In addition to horrifying the entire population of the country, it aroused the special enmity of the American Legion, under the banner of which the murdered men were marching. This latter body, numbering nearly four million men, represents, as it were, a cross-section of American society. In its ranks are enrolled members of all social and industrial classes. The I. W. W., in aiming its weapons against the Legion...