Word: editor
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...class of 1918 has been postponed until next Wednesday, when all candidates should report at the CRIMSON office at 7 o'clock. Meanwhile those desiring further information can get the same from Grover O'Neill '16, at the CRIMSON office or at Stoughton 19. One more business editor will be elected to the staff from the class of 1918. This editor will be an assistant business manager in his Junior year, and in his Senior year will compete with the other two assistant managers for the business managership...
...proposed embargo on the exportation of munitions. Professor W. E. Hocking '01 and Professor Josiah Royce hon. '01, both of the Philosophy Department, will discuss the moral side of the question of sending arms to the Allies. They will be followed by Mr. William Roscoe Thayer '81, former editor of the Graduates Magazine, and Dr. Richard C. Cabot...
...public meeting to consider "The Duty of America in the War" will be held in Tremont Temple, Boston, next Sunday afternoon at 3 o'clock. Dr. Richard C. Cabot '89, Professor W. E. Hocking '01, Professor Josiah Royce hon. '11, and Mr. William Roscoe Thayer '81, former editor of the Graduates Magazine, will be the speakers. Patriotic songs will be sung, and a collection will be taken in aid of the American Ambulance Service in France. This meeting has been called by the "American Rights Committee," which includes in its membership a large number of graduates of the University...
...William Roscoe Thayer '81, former editor of the Graduates' Magazine, will address a meeting of the Diplomatic Club in the North Tower of Memorial Hall this evening at 6.30 o'clock. The subject of the address will be "John Hay's Contributions to American Diplomacy." Mr. Thayer recently published a two volume life of John Hay. He has also contributed the "Life and Times of Cavour" to the field of diplomatic history...
...Editor of the Atlantic, who was also a member of the firm of Ticknor and Fields, was a valued and valuable friend to every author of distinction during the middle of the nineteenth century. When they learned of his fondness for the original manuscripts of famous books, they gave him the best they had saved from the printer and furnace-man. Lowell sent him the Second Series of the 'Bigelow Papers,' 'as a trifling acknowledgment of many substantial obligations,' and Holmes inscribed the manuscript of 'The Guardian Angel' as 'A token of kind regard from one of many writers...