Word: eliot
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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President Eliot arrived in St. Louis yesterday, where he will remain four days as the guest of Mr. George D. Markham '87. This morning he is to address the St. Louis Society of Pedagogy on "Education for Trades and Trade in a Democracy," and will lunch with Mr. E. M. Grossman '96, to meet the members of the St. Louis School Board. This evening he will attend the dinner of the Civic League. Tomorrow he will deliver a discourse in the Church of the Messiah. Monday and Tuesday will be spent in Louisville, Kentucky, and on Wednesday he will arrive...
...Faculty has made very clear to us this year its proposed remedy for the situation; its desire to improve the scholarship whose pre-eminence is shared by no other institution. We were, therefore, well prepared for President Eliot's suggestion, made in the report published this morning, to allow but two intercollegiate contests in any one branch of sport...
...Dole '10, 30 yds.; R. F. Hoyt '10, 30 yds.; F. W. Loomis '10, 70 yds.; H. Y. Masten '10, 80 yds.; G. Murphy '10, 60 yds.; L. Wulsin '10, 200 yds.; N. J. Beals '11, 100 yds.; H. C. Brown '11, 100 yds.; J. Eliot '11, 100 yds.; G. R. Hardig '11, 60 yds.; P. C. Heald '11, 50 yds.; R. Hornblower '11, 40 yds.; H. Jaques, Jr., '11, scratch; J. H. Noble...
Following the same broad lines that have made our Law School the foremost in the land, and placed our Medical School on the high road to becoming so, this University has now established a School of Business Administration. It was President Eliot who foresaw that professional schools must receive only holders of the bachelor's degrees; and to him must go the credit for the greatness of our University, which, as he himself has just said, "is the only university in the country organized on a true university basis." And the strength of our university basis is increased...
President Eliot arrived in Chicago Tuesday evening and was given a most enthusiastic reception at the fifty-first annual dinner of the Chicago Harvard Club, which was attended by some 400 graduates of the University. At the dinner President Eliot gave two addresses, the first being largely an historical review of the University during his thirty-nine years of presidency, while the second was of a more personal nature...