Word: addresses
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...small dinner in honor of Mr. Tomlinson is being given by the Harvard English Department and the Union. Profesors J. S. P. Tatlock '96, H. E. Hollins, and K. B. Murdock '16, will be present. The address will start at eight o'clock...
There are 2,167 Harvard men living in foreign countries. This survey must be understood as referring only to present address, not to nationality...
...Utah, until sent to Congress. He is sometimes confused with a Scotch-Canadian namesake who, a good Baptist minister and college president, campaigns for the Anti-Saloon League in Nebraska. But not often, for he takes care to give "c/o Supreme Court of the U. S." as his address, in Who's Who, and wears a short beard of silver-tipped distinction. He is usually to be found on the vested-rights side of economic questions, for which Labor loves him little...
Judge F. P. Cabot '90 of the Juvenile Court of Boston, and G. P. Ludiam '25 of Dennison House in Boston have been engaged to address the annual social service convention of the Phillips Brooks House Association, to be held at 7.30 o'clock tonight in Peabody Hall at the Phillips Brooks House. The conference is intended to bring together all men in the University who have an interest in social service and to give them a clear idea of the work carried on by the Social Service Committee. Refreshments will be served after the speaking...
ALFRED E. SMITH-Henry F. Pringle-Macy-Masius ($3). "Al Smith's face is always reddish. In the heat of a vehement address it becomes crimson. He sweats ... he is all that could be desired of a Governor, even by the most correct of critics. . . . His tailoring is immaculate, there is about him just a trace of his trucking days. ... He is discordant, often awkward, lacking in versatility. . . . Tremendously effective. . . ." It is difficult, in writing the biography of a living statesman, to indicate his character without becoming technically libelous. This difficulty Author Pringle has met rather than avoided...