Word: career
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...Eaton began a journalistic career on the staff of the Boston Journal and, at the end of two years, accepted a position in the dramatic department of the New York Tribune. He soon became known as a frequent contributor to the Atlantic Monthly, Everybody's and other magazines. In 1907 Mr. Eaton became dramatic critic of the New York...
April 2--Lecture by Hon. C. J. Bonaparte '71, ex-attorney-general of the United States, on "Law as a Career in the United States," the fifth of the series of six lectures on professions...
...beginning of a man's college career he is faced with a situation of great difficulty. If he wishes to take things with comparative ease,--and in most cases he does,--he decides on the regular four years' course and gets his degree in the approved fashion. If he is a good athlete he nearly always takes this course, chiefly through compulsion, because under the present objectionable rule he will not be allowed to play on the University teams if he is registered in one of the graduate departments. The other alternative open to the undergraduate is to go through...
...Charles J. Bonaparte '71, who will speak on "Law as a Career" as the fifth of the series of Union lectures on professions, will lecture on Friday, April 2, instead of on Tuesday, March 30, as formerly announced...
...made up to become a lawyer may well keep his decision in suspense until he has heard what can be said for business, or applied science, or education. A man who thinks he wants to be a doctor may well hear what Dean Christian has said about a medical career but also what President King will say tonight about "The Claims of the Ministry on Strong Men." The Union lectures are meant to teach that all the professions are equally worthy, and that all make equal demands on men who are attracted by the call to hard work leading...