Word: chiefs
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...Parker discussed the three chief points of the Democratic platform: tariff reform, the guarantee bank deposit, and the legislative control of our courts. He claimed that the first would be changed, as soon as a sufficient need had arisen, by the same party that had instituted it. To force all depositors to pay tithes was an obvious injustice. As for the third contention, any such legislation as Mr. Bryan desired showed a suspicion and doubt on the part of the people, of the integrity of the United States courts. Such a suspicion would be of the greatest injury...
...William Crawford Gorgas, son of a Confederate soldier, first lieutenant, captain, major and colonel in the Medical Corps of the United States Army, chief sanitary officer of the Isthmian Canal Zone, today the most successful demonstrator of the present efficacy and future promise of preventive medicine...
...Commencement Day the Yard will be closed to the public. Only holders of degrees, officers of instruction and government guests of the Corporation and of the Chief Marshal of the Alumni candidates for degrees and students will be admitted. Ladies will not be admitted. The Johnston, Meyer, Mekean and Class of 1837 gates will be used...
...Yard will be closed to the public on Commencement Day. Only holders of degrees, officers of instruction and government, guests of the Corporation and of the Chief Marshal of the Alumni, candidates for degree, and students will be admitted. Ladies will not be admitted. The Johnston, Meyer, Mc Kean, and class of 1857 gates will be used. M.H. MORGAN, University Marshall...
...Painters extends from Altichiero to Correggio, with a postscript on the Electics and the Teneloists. He analyzes with equal patience and skill the works of scores of lesser men. He seems to have overlooked nothing. And he brings all, down to the most modest specimen, into his system. Of chief interest to the American reader, who has not the pictures before him to refer to, are Mr. Berenson's generalizations--the pages in which he sets forth his main ideas, or sums up some really important master, like Montegna or Corrreggio. His remarks on the grotesque, on pettiness...