Word: district
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1900-1909
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...issues and by considering the question from a broader point of view. Mr. Bliss Perry presided at the debate, and the judges were president Pritchett of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Provost C. C. Harrison of the University of Pennsylvania and Dr. Arthur L. Brown of Providence, U. S. district judges of Rhode Island. A. S. Hayes '91 coached the University team...
...United States Naval Academy at Annapolis will be held at the Winthrop School, Boston, from 7 p. m. to 10 p. m. tonight, tomorrow, and Wednesday. Eligibility is confined to those who are from fifteen to twenty years in age and who are residents of the ninth Congressional District, which comprises the first nine wards of Boston, the sixth and seventh precincts of the twelfth ward, and the town of Winthrop. Candidates will be required to take physical and mental examinations, and the contestant receiving the highest percentage mark will be called principal, and the three contestants next in order...
...rebuttal the order was Fox, Lockwood and Ewell. The main speeches were twelve minutes in length and the rebuttal five. The judges were President Pritchett of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Provost C. C. Harrison of the University of Pennsylvania and Dr. Arthur L. Brown of Providence, U. S. district judge of Rhode Island. Mr. Bliss Perry, editor of the Atlantic Monthly, was the presiding officer...
...Sears 2L. The main speeches will be twelve minutes in length and the rebuttal five. The judges will be: President Pritchett of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Provost C. C. Harrison of the University of Pennsylvania, and Dr. Arthur L. Brown of Providence, United States district judge of Rhode Island. Mr. Bliss Perry of Cambridge, editor of the Atlantic Monthly, will be the presiding officer...
William Travers Jerome, District Attorney of New York, will speak on "The College Man in Municipal Politics"--with special reference to the politics of New York City--in the Living Room of the Union on Thursday evening, March 26. The lecture, which will be open to the University, is to be held under the auspices of the Law School Political Club. This club membership in which is restricted to second and third year law men, has as its aim the encouragement of the interest of college men in municipal politics. The club was organized last February, and, besides holding meetings...