Word: consulars
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Rice, A. P., consular service...
Smith, F.M., Jr., consular service...
...Library has recently received two sets of interesting documents, the gifts of E. V. Morgan '90 and J. Boardman '94. The first consists of all the originals of the consular proclamations, with one or two exceptions, which were issued in Samoa during the recent complications there. Mr. Morgan served as secretary to the American Commission which was sent to Samoa a year ago, and the documents collected by him comprise the proclamations of the English, American and German consuls, notices issued by the Supreme Court and other decrees. Last December he gave the Library copies of several of the proclamations...
Under the present administration there are ten Harvard graduates in the diplomatic and consular service of the United States. Of these, two are ambassadors, two are ministers and six are consuls. Their names and the places to which they are sent are as follows: Ambassadors--Rufus Hodges Choate '52, to Great Britain; Charlemagne Tower '72, to Russia. Ministers--George Herbert Bridgman M.'81, to Bolivia; Bellamy Storer '67, to Spain. Consuls -- Frank Dyer Chester '91, to Buda-Pesth, Austria Hungary; Joseph Waite Merriam '56, to Iquique, Chile; Talbot Jones Albert '68, to Brunswick, and Thomas William Peters...
Professor Strobel commented on the diplomatic and consular system of the United States and showed wherein these systems were related to civil service. Professor Macvane spoke on civil service in England, showing the advantages of the English over the American system. Germany and England have, at present, the most fully developed civil service system in the world...