Word: deans
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...toast-master will be J. R. Worcester '82, a consulting engineer of Boston and president of the Association of Harvard Engineers. Speeches will be made by Dean W. C. Sabine '88, Hon. J. J. Myers '69, a trustee of the McKay fund, M. T. Rogers 1 G., E. L. Lincoln '09, and Professors G. F. Swain and H. E. Clifford of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology...
...studied the same subject at the Universities of Berlin, Heidelberg, and Paris. He returned to this country in 1894, to take up the practice of law in Los Angeles, where he remained until 1899. He organized the Law School of the University of Southern California, of which he became dean. He acted as dean of the College of Law of the University of Illinois from 1899 to 1903, when he accepted the position of professor of law at the Columbia Law School. In 1906 he became professor of law, and later of international law, at George Washington University...
Professor Merriman writes with bubbling enthusiasm of the winter quarter. The articles of interest on the last few months include one on the late Dean Wright by his temporary successor, Professor Smyth, loving and sympathetic in tone towards one to whose unfailing kindness all graduate students of recent years owe a debt never to be forgotten. Dean Haskins is welcomed in a cordial editorial. Mr. R.H. Dana as laudator temporis acti shows that last year's success in rowing is due to a return to earlier ways. Professor Jackson gives a review of the work of the late Wolcott Gibbs...
...rest of the number is of the usual sort, giving the life of the place in the last few months. Not the least interesting are the photographs, several of President Eliot, one of President Lowell, by no means the best published, another of Dean Haskins, which does not show the geniality of his face; that of Dean Wright lacks the twinkle of the eye which meant so much...
...University sport during a season will increase his desire to work, but rather that an athlete constantly training will make sure that his record at the office is satisfactory. His absences from Cambridge are undoubtedly undesirable from a Faculty standpoint, but as is shown by the establishment of the Dean's List a man who is doing good work should be given a certain amount of discretion in the matter of "cuts...