Word: san
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...handiwork of the American mob spirit is the same in New York as it is in Boston, Chicago, or San Francisco. What happened yesterday at the Polo Grounds has had its parallel in occasional demonstrations in the Harvard Stadium against the home team. If manners make the man, our crowds have still much to learn. In the last analysis the level of sportsmanship depends as much upon the temper and ideals of the sporting public as it does upon the standards of the players themselves, whether professionals or amateurs. What wonder that the pages of professional baseball are sometimes marred...
Just after the Parcel Post was introduced in the United States, a very much photographed boy of 13 was tagged, registered, and posted in New York and delivered a week later in San Francisco. The public, little realizing the precedent established, laughed and forgot the incident. And now what is the result? Postmaster Behymer of Cincinnati rises in his seat at the National Association of Postmasters to protest against the promiscuous shipment of alligators. Mr. Behymer points out that livestock, under the law, is entitled to the privileges of being mailed. He faces calmly the prospect of "being obliged...
...addition the following men were elected editors: Frederick McGeorge Bundy 2G.B., of Norfolk, Va.; Paul Codman Cabot 2G.B., of Brookline; Carlton Robert Eagle Sp.G.B., of Pontiac, Mich.; Charles Arthur Glover 2G.B., of Selma, Cal.; Edward Blair Gordon 2G.B., of San Francisco, Cal.; Howard Goodman 2G.B., of Chicago, Ill.; Deane Waldo Malott 2G.B., of Abilene, Kan.; Dave Hennen Morris 2G.B., of New York City; Samuel Francis Nicholson 2G.B., of Richmond, Ind.; Clarence Brett Piper 2G.B., of Belmont; and Henry Meldrum Stevens 2G.B., of Portland...
...clock the Association will hold a dinner at the Copley Plaza Hotel in Boston. Mr. William Thomas '76 of San Francisco, vice-president of the Association, will preside...
...reunion was held at St. Louis and in the following year at Chicago. The meeting at San Francisco in 1915 was held in connection with the Pan-Pacific Exposition of that year and was considered as great a step in bringing the far West in touch with the movement as the New York meeting had been in the East. In 1916 the reunion was held at Pittsburgh with President Lowell and Major H. L. Higginson '82 leading the marchers...