Word: cleveland
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...York City; L. P. Clarke, Special '05-06, Rochester, N. Y.; O. H. Cobb '02, Syracuse, N. Y.; F. H. Kernan '97, Utica, N. Y.; D. B. Holt '90, North Dakota; J. E. C. Gaylor '21, Columbus, Ohio; J. J. Rowe '07, Cincinnati, Ohio; J. H. Macleod Jr. '14, Cleveland, Ohio; Virgil Schaeffor '11, Dayton, Ohio; M. S. Wardell, A. M. '22, Oklahoma; Rogers MacVeagh '10, Oregon; H. S. Clark '87, Philadelphia, Pa.; H. F. Baker '01, Pittsburg, Pa.; H. C. Dewey '12, Tennessee; W. W. Fisher '04, Texas; H. D. Noyle, Law '14-15, Utah; Governor F. S. Billings...
...opening night will be in the Hasty Pudding Club on April 14, which is graduates' night. On April 15 and 16 public performances will be given at the Club The schedule for the western trip follows: April 17, North Hampton; April 19, Buffalo; April 20, Detroit; April 21, Cleveland; April 22, Pittsburgh; April 23. New York; April 26, 27, and 28, Boston at the Hollis Street Theatre...
...first survey into crime and criminal justice ever conducted by a Faculty of Law, will be directed at Greater Boston by Dean Pound, Professor Frankfurter and their associates. In 1921 a somewhat similar investigation, but on a smaller scale, was held in Cleveland, and was hailed as a material step forward. Harlan F. Stone, a justice of the Supreme Court, in reviewing the work said. "The survey as a whole is dominated by the belief that facts have a reforming power of their own. Civic organizations of Cleveland who are responsible for this undertaking may take just pride in their...
...Boston investigation will be run on the same general plan as the Cleveland undertaking, but will have a wider scope. "It will cover the conditions of crime and factors in criminality as well as the administration of criminal justice", said Dean Pound...
...greatest but one of the most prosperous papers in the middle West. It not only dominated Kansas City but all the surrounding country-and it made its owner a very wealthy man. He was a peculiar type without much education. In his paper he championed Grover Cleveland, Henry James, Art and Theodore Roosevelt. He was a hearty, bluff kind of man, scrupulous in his dealing's, loving fights, refusing to be dictated to by advertizers and also labor unions. He picked up several old masters, which he later gave to Kansas City when he gave it a museum...