Word: governors
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...Forestry Club will hold a reception and dinner at the Exchange Club, corner of Milk and Batterymarch streets, Boston, tomorrow evening. Among the speakers will be Theodore Roosevelt '80, ex-Governor Curtis Guild '81, President Eliot, and Fletcher Ranney '83, the State Forester. There will be a reception between 6 and 7 o'clock, after which a dinner will be served...
...city of Boston will conduct exercises in honor of the late Mrs. Julia Ward Howe in Symphony Hall tomorrow evening at 8 o'clock. Ex-Governor Curtis Guild '81 will review Mrs. Howe's life from a literary point of view, Judge Robert Grant '73 will read a commemorative poem, and other addresses will be made. The musical features will be furnished by a chorus of 80 male voices, partly composed of members of the University, under the direction of Dr. A. T. Davison '06, the college organist; 50 members of the Boston Opera House Orchestra; and a chorus...
...lawyers have used the law as a ladder to public office. In the list are five United States Senators, ten Representatives, two ministers to Great Britain, three members of the Cabinet, three for- eign ministers, one members of the Continental Congress and also of the Constitutional Convention, one Governor of Massachusetts, two Presidents and one Acting President of Harvard, three presidents of other colleges, six judges of the United States Courts and of State Supreme Courts, one United States Supreme Court Justice; and, if one is to believe the current gossip, another is soon to sit on that bench...
...pall bearers will be Dr. A. F. Barnes '98, H. N. Fisher '57, ex-Governor Guild '81, Professor C. B. Gulick '90, C. S. Hamlin '83, Professor W. F. Harris '91, G. M. Lane '81, L. E. Opdycke '80, W. T. Piper '74, Mr. E. H. Sothern, Dean E. R. Thayer '88, E. J. Wendell '82, Professor J. W. White p.'77, Professor J. K. Whittemore '95, Mr. Francis Wilson, and W. S. Youngman...
...Graduates' Magazine well performs the usual task of bringing us up to date on matters of the last few months. The leading article of the September number is an abstract of Governor Hughes's address on "Some Aspects of Our Democracy" delivered before the Phi Beta Kappa last June. One may regret that we are given only an abstract and not the complete address. Governor Hughes's stay in Cambridge was marked by very high demonstrations of esteem and enthusiasm for him on the part of both graduates and undergraduates; the exponent of the firm but quiet life must have...