Word: radioed
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...also to skeletonize the crews of other necessary vessels. But even with these reductions we would have to abolish our Adriatic and Central American squadrons and this is unthinkable. With 65,000 men we could have only about 20 percent of the men for shore stations, aviation instruction, radio school, etc. Heretofore it has been our custom to have 50 percent of the enlisted personnel on shore, while in England they have 60 percent. With a navy of 96,000 men proposed by Mr. Harding, we would have 30 percent on shore...
...view of the approaching triangular debate with Yale and Princeton and especially due to lack of efficient sending apparatus in the University such a debate would be impracticable. It is altogether probable that by another year, the suggestion will be put into effect, and they by using a powerful radio station in Boston or by additions to the equipment of the University it will be possible to hold debates in the future with some of the larger colleges and universities of the West and Middle West, especially with Leland Stanford or the University or Washington...
...announcement of courses may read at a not distant date if present developments in radio telephony and reading continue. At the same time that individual wireless receivers are spring up on all ears to catch the music and the speeches in the air, Rear Admiral Fiske has invented a Reading Machine which enables a man to carry "the Government of England" in his vest pocket. Strips of paper bearing microscopic characters are passed by the operator of the machine under a magnifying glass powerful enough to permit comfortable reading. So vast is the saving of paper effected by this process...
...idea originated a year ago last fall at a meeting in Worcester of the American Radio Relay League, when a representative of the Brown radio organization called a conference of Dartmouth, Harvard, Princeton, and Yale radio men to discuss the possibilities of such a system. It was decided to attempt to bring the idea into reality but no definite steps were taken till the manager of the University club, K. B. Rowell Sent out letters to the wireless clubs of Brown, Dartmouth, Princeton, Tufts, and Yale to arrange for a regular system of intercollegiate news exchange. Favorable replies were received...
...realize the bigger and better things of life. The printed page does not reach such people. But the spoken word, with its emotion reflected in its accent does "get across" as we say, and it would be of tremendous value to have it do so generally. The radio telephone can do all this, and how much more is only a matter of conjecture. Each one of us can exercise his imagination upon the matter. But I venture to go on record in these pages, to the extent of saying, that not a man of us foregathering here in the pages...