Word: royalities
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Professor Ripley is one of the leading authorities on economics in the country. In 1908 he was the Huxley memorial lecturer of the Royal Anthropological Institute in London...
...curtailed. Now that the warm weather has come, many more machines are in the air, and necessarily there are more accidents. As time goes on, also, more new planes are put into operation, and therefore much more flying is done. Our mortality statistics, if compared with those of the Royal Flying Corps camps in Texas and elsewhere, are very favorable, and yet these camps are not considered to be carelessly conducted...
This institution, which has its headquarters at 8 Rue de Richelieu, Paris, was opened in October, and has already a college membership list of 115. The Royal Palace Hotel, the Paris home of the Union, is crowded every night with men in uniform. Mr. Stokes writes: "It is delightful to have men drop in constantly who seem to appreciate the privileges of the place when they come here from their camps or the front, and I hear on all sides deep appreciation of the Union and what it is doing for college...
Francis Peabody Magoun, Jr., '15, of Cambridge, a second lieutenant in the Royal Flying Corps, according to word which has just been received in a letter written by him from France, brought down his first German airplane on December 16. The exact sector in which he was engaged is not known. The despatch states that he got so near to the enemy plane that he could see the red cheeks of his Boche enemy, a shot from his machine fun sending a bullet through the German's head. The Boche was a man of great reputation in the Allied camps...
...early part of the war Magoun left College to drive an ambulance on the French front at Verdun and Champagne. He remained in that service for some time, but returned to College. He stayed here until last February, when he went to England and enlisted in the Royal Flying Corps...