Word: authorities
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...been successively commissioner at the convention with Great Britain to decide the controversy in regard to seal fisheries, delegate to numerous national conventions, and the delegate of various bar organizations at international conventions. He lectured on government at the University during the years 1902 and 1903. He is the author of the "Index Digest of Interstate Commerce Laws," and of several statistical and financial pamphlets...
...October, Mr. H. H. Clayton, of the Blue Hill Observatory, and Mr. Lincoln Steffens, author of "The Shame of the Cities"; in November, Mr. J. S. Wise, one of the most prominent lawyers of New York City, Mr. Beekman Winthrop, Assistant Secretary of the Treasury, and Mr. T. M. Osborne, of the Committee on Public Utility in New York; in December, Mr. E. B. Baldwin, the Arctic explorer, and Mr. A. H. Woods, of the New York Police Department; in January, Dr. Charles A. Eastman, the only North American Indian on the lecture platform; in March, Hon. Samuel W. McCall...
...review of Professor Lowell's "Government of England" is the second article. The author summarizes the impression made by the volumes in the one word "magistrale." Under the heading "From a Graduate's Window," is a short sketch. "The Humors of the Quinquennial" in which the peculiar relations of the many, and the numbers of the most common names, are brought to light...
Dean Fenn has been preacher to the University from 1896 to 1898 and from 1902 to 1905. Since 1901 he had been Bussey Professor of Systematic Theology in the Divinity School, and in 1906 he became Dean of the School. He is the author of "Lessons on Acts," "Lessons on Luke," "Lessons on Psalms," and "The Flowering of the Hebrew Religion." CLASS DAY COMMITTEE...
...purposes of several new clubs of Harvard men is a valuable contribution to this issue. Most important is the new Harvard Club of Boston, which started only a few weeks ago but has grown with astonishing speed to a membership of 700. O. B. Roberts '86 is the author of this sketch. Professor W. M. Davis '69 describes the Harvard Travelers' Club, an organization dating from 1902, whose membership is limited to men who have had unusual opportunities for travel. The Cosmopolitan Club, described by J. D. Greene '96, is familiar to the undergraduates but of special importance to only...