Word: postalized
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Granting that these objections exist, do they justify the utter relinquishment, of our postal flying experiments? The New York-Chicago service has maintained an unprecedented regularity of flights, even under the disadvantage of severe winter conditions and in spite of the disturbing accidents which have in several instances resulted fatally. Those who are convinced that mail by airplane is foredoomed to failure point to the recent retirement of a British air mail concern from the cross-channel route on the ground that winter flying did not pay. Certainly aerial letter-carrying has not yet reached the point where...
...members of the University Chapter, and members of other Chapters who are residing in Cambridge are invited to dinner. The former, who have signified their intention of coming by postal card, may purchase their tickets at the door. All others should obtain tickets in advance from Professor Howard at 39 Kirkland street, or from H. D. Smith at the Crimson Building. Only a limited number of tickets are left. The price of the dinner will be $2.50. Informal dress will be worn...
...order to convey a correct opinion to the outside world regarding the stand of the Faculty toward the coming elections, which cannot be done by the few votes cast in the recent Presidential Straw Ballot, held under the auspices of the Harvard CRIMSON, the Harvard CRIMSON is conducting a postal card canvass of all members of the instructing body of Harvard University whose addresses are available at this time...
...promise insures a cooling-off period of nine months during which war will be impossible. That no nation will break its pledge is made certain by a provision that any nation which breaks it thereby declares war on every other nation in the league and automatically all financial, commercial, postal and other relations are cut off, and the offending nation is subjected to a withering boycott by all the world. This is so severe a penalty that it is certain that hereafter no war can begin, within the nine months period at least, and if a war is postponed nine...
...much of a factor they were. It is not certain, indeed, that anyone knows even now, but some statistics gathered by Harvard would seem to throw significant light on the problem. The university has made a careful compilation of the number of men who voted in the last postal ballot for overseers and gone to some trouble to determine exactly what percentage of graduates in each state had enough interest in their college to return their ballots. In general, two conclusions seemed to be reached. The first is that the East does not have any particular advantage over the West...