Word: bulletin
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...that Harvard men may honor the memory of the late Theodore Roosevelt '80 by constructing and maintaining a building at the University to be known as "Roosevelt House" is disclosed in a report to the Associated Harvard Clubs of a committee of alumni, published today in the Harvard Alumni Bulletin. The report recommends that the Roosevelt memorial building shall contain a working floor for the use of some of the departments of the University, and particularly for the tutorial work of the college, as well as a memorial reading room where shall be kept Roosevelt memorabilia of all kinds...
According to a recent issue of the Alumni Bulletin, there is a bill before the Massachusetts Legislature providing that the state law controlling the election of Overseers be amended,--to the effect that the Governing Boards hereafter have the power to change such elections as they deem necessary. This bill is the result of a long agitation in favor of the election of the Overseers by postal ballot. Under the present system, candidates are suggested by a committee of the Alumni Association. These names are then nominated by postal service and are finally voted upon at Commencement by those alumni...
Thirty-seven graduates of the University or holders of other University degrees are members of the executive and legislative branches of the government of Massachusetts, as listed in the current issue of the Alumni Bulletin. Governor Channing H. Cox, who received an LL.B. degree in 1904, leads the list. He is a Dartmouth graduate. State Treasurer James Jackson is a member of the class of 1904 and B. Loring Young, Speaker of the House, of the class of 1907 and LL.B. '11. Attorney-General J. Weston Allen, Yale '93, received a University LL.B...
Henry Walter Jones '86, for the last five years Business Manager of the Alumni Bulletin, died yesterday very suddenly. Mr. Jones was well-known among graduates of the University in Cambridge, in Boston, and in New York. He was active in the Colonial Club at the University...
...survey of the Harvard University Catalogue reveals the fact that despite a long list of optional subjects, we have more required subjects for admission than either Yale or Princeton, so that freedom of selection is correspondingly limited. In a recent letter to the Alumni Bulletin, a graduate of the University points out that in addition to the usual English, Mathematics and Foreign Language requirements, Harvard demands both History and Physics,--two difficult topics, in neither of which has the College Entrance Board ever deemed it expedient to pass many candidates. While the standard for History...