Word: hoar
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...Roswell G. Hoar will lecture at Amherst, December 7, on the labor question...
...George F. Hoar has contributed several hundred government publications and some rare works from his private library to Clarke University...
...made up as follows: Elections, W. G. Russell. G. O. Shattuck, Edmund Wetmore, Henry Cabot Lodge; reports and resolutions-C. F. Adams, H. W. Putnam, J. T. Morse jr., H. W. Torrey, J. O. Sargent, J. R. Lowell, R. M. Morse; departments, Divinity school-A. P. Peabody, E. R. Hoar, F. H. Hornbrooke, Alexander McKenzie, C. F. Dole, Arthur Brooks; Law school-C. C. Beaman. J. C. Carter, Jeremiah Smith. H. W. Putnam, L. D. Brandlis, J. B. Warner, F. C. Lowell; Medical and Dental schools-R. M. Hodges. Morrill Wyman, H. P. Wolcott, G. B. Shattuck, Algernon Coolidge...
President Hall was followed by Senator Hoar, who made an able and scholarly address. The last speaker was the Rev. Edward Everett Hale and the exercises were closed with a benediction by the Rev. Daniel Merriman...
...easy dignified manner, which left the impression of considerable reserve power. The next speaker, A. S. Wicks, caught the spirit of Webster's "Against Secession." but his voice lacked the power to give it adequate expression. C. M. Thayer gave an intelligent, but not very forcible rendering of Hoar's "The Ordinances of 1787." W. L. Monro, who followed him, delivered Mrs. Runcie's "Anselmo the Priest." a piece which calls for considerable dramatic ability; his rendering of it was an excellent effort. W. H. Warren spoke Henry Clay's, "The Greek Revolution," in a remarkably intelligent manner. He thoroughly...