Word: alabama
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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LL.B.--(Out of Course) -- Daniel DeCourcey Donovan, A.B. (Boston Coll.) 1909, as of class of 1912, of Rockland; Manly Allen Collins. S.B. (Alabama Polytechnic Institute) 1907, as of the class of 1914, Gallion, Ala.; William Johnson Dean, A.B. (Union Univ., Tenn.) 1910, as of the class of 1914, of Russellville, Ky.; Daniel Badger Priest, A.B. 1910, as of the class of 1914, of Washington. D. C.; Walter Augustus Windsor. A.B. (Marietta Coll.) 1910, as of the class of 1914, of Marietta...
Group B--California, Washington, Oregon, Colorado, Nebraska, Kansas, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan, Missouri, Iowa, Georgia, Texas, Alabama, Arkansas, Mississippi...
...there has been only one clothing collection--that conducted by H. L. Nash, '16, last autumn. The results of this collection were most satisfactory, enough being collected to send boxes of clothing to 12 places, some of these places being as far off as Tuskegee Institute, Alabama. The annual spring collection is now about to be started...
...Union last evening. The first part of his talk was an account of his life and the hardships which he encountered in making his way to Hampton Institute, where he secured his education. Following this he told of his resolve to take up work in the black belt of Alabama, and his development of the Tuskegee Institute; and closed with a few evidences of the progress of his race, and an enumeration of the opportunities for useful service that the negro problem offers...
...ambition for knowledge led him to travel five hundred miles "by walking and begging rides in both wagons and in cars" to Hampton Institute, from which he graduated in 1875, later becoming an instructor there. Since 1881 he has been head of the negro school at Tuskegee, Alabama. Opened in July of that year, the Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute became under his administration the foremost exponent of industrial education for the negro race...