Word: blakely
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...Lampoon announced last night the election of the following editors to the board: Literary, Joseph Alger, Jr., '22, of Brockton, and Hillyer Blake Brown '21 of San Francisco, Cal.; Drawing, Nathaniel Choate '22 of Framingham Centre; Business, Ambrose Ely Chambers '21, of New York, N. Y.; Josiah Noel Macy '22 of Scarborough-on-Hudson, N. Y.; James Higginson Manning '21 of Dedham; Arthur Boylston Nichols, Jr., '21, of Cambridge, and Clarence Clargle Ryan '20 of Coggleskill...
...Eliot Wadsworth '98, joint chairman of the Harvard Endowment Fund Committee; Arthur Woods '92, formerly Police Commissioner of New York city, and recently assistant to the Secretary of War; Henry S. Drinker, President of Lehigh University; Ira N. Hollis, Hon. A. M. '99; Samuel D. Parker '91, George Baty Blake '93, Amos Tuck French '80, George C. Shattuck '01, Alexander Whiteside '95, Grenville Clark...
Scroll and Key:--Seymour H. Knox, William D. Whitney, Charles L. Faherty, Nelson J. Smith, Elisha Fisher, John G, Husted, Blake Lawrence, Charles S. Hemingway, Robert L. Hammell, Evans Woollen, Jr., John Crosby, Jr., Benjamin B. Jennings, George P. Lawrence, Ralph P. Hanes, and Wingston Schrieber...
Professor-Emeritus Clarence John Blake M.D. '65, of the Medical School, died yesterday at his home in Boston at the age of seventy-six, following a brief illness. He was born in Boston in 1843 and attended the Roxbury Latin School and the Lawrence Scientific School of the University. He later attended the Medical School, and then studied medicine abroad for four years. In 1888 Professor Blake became a member of the Faculty of the Medical School, holding the professorship in Otology. In 1907 he was given the Walter Augustus Lecompte Professorship of Otology, and became Professor-Emeritus...
...appears that the percent killed of all who engaged in active service was far greater at that time. In the Civil War, 1,342 University men served in the Union armies, and 132, or 9.8 percent, were killed, or died of wounds or disease in service. Mr. H. N. Blake '58 reports that of 304 University men in the Confederate ranks, 70, or 23.2 percent were killed. The high percent of mortality in the last case was due to the fact that Confederate soldiers had to serve for the duration of the war, whereas the Union men could resign when...