Word: travels
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...affirmative against Yale at the Harvard Club in Boston will be James J. Pattee, Jr. '41, William C. Murphy '42, and Langdon P. Marvin, Jr. '41. Assuming the opposite view, Harvard's negative team of Payson R. Wolff '42, Richard B. Wolf '41, and John W. Sullivan '43 will travel to New Jersey to face their Princeton opponents. Harold M. Bailim '43 will act as alternate for either team...
Awards for travel and study this summer are: Rogers fellowship to Sumner Willard, teaching fellow in Romance Languages; Charles Dexter scholarships in English to Meyer H. Abrams, instructor in English, Charles W. Dunn, teach- ing fellow in English, Branford P. Millar, teaching fellow in English, Robert R. Rogers, teaching fellow in English, Outo E. Schoen-Rene, who was an instructor in English last year, and Claude M. Simpson, Jr., instructor in English; Sheldon fellowship to Irving M. London...
Most members of I Am are female, middle-aged, and well-to-do, according to Miller. They travel around the country in large yellow Chryslers, which serve the double function of comfortable conveyances and religious observance. For believers in I Am are convinced that yellow and white are good colors, while purple is a wicked one. It seems that every person has an invisible white light hanging constantly over him, which is repelled by a purple ray generated by his evil and impure thoughts. Apparently the ownership of a yellow Chrysler helps you to live cleanly...
...line with this emphasis, the State Department has extended travel grants to a considerable number of distinguished journalists, novelists, and others. These visits not only provide the leaders of thought and opinion in our neighboring republics with an opportunity to correct many one sided and distorted views of our own country, but they also afford us an opportunity to modify mistaken notions concerning the other Americas'." he continued...
...Huge Greek and American flags were held high overhead. There was a crash and the sound of splintering glass in the Spomenik off the Terazia as the crowds smashed the windows of the German Travel Bureau. Through double rings of Army guards upon the Terazia they pressed forward until there was another louder crash and the windows of the Italian Travel Bureau fell in splinters...