Word: lately
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...following letter from President Hopkins to President Lowell arrived too late to be included in the Crimson of Monday, President Lowell's birthday. It is now printed without comment. December...
Professor Palmer's tribute to the late President is particularly enlightening for the fact that it was purely spontaneous and written not for publication but merely as one individual writes to another. It was motivated by a profound and sincere desire in the heart and mind of the eminent professor to do personal honor to his chief. Few were in a more advantageous position to judge Dr. Eliot than was Professor Palmer, and few appreciated his personal qualities with greater symphathetic understanding. Professor Palmer saw President Eliot in certain critical situations in the latter's life from an intimate angle...
Although the Charles William Eliot Memorial issue is primarily an undergraduate undertaking, a majority of the contributors are educators of national prominence. Hitherto unpublished letters exchanged between George Herbert Palmer '69, Professor-Emeritus, and Dr. Eliot are included. On one page college and church pay the late President homage in tributes by Bishop William Lawrence '71, Arthur Twining Hadley, President of Yale University, and Byron Satterlee Hurlbut '87, Professor of English in the University...
This plan was to publish a few short essays on Dr. Eliot by prominent contemporary educators together with articles written by the editors themselves dealing with particular aspects and phases of his life and work and illustrated by a number of photographs and portraits of the late President and reproduction of scenes pertinent to his activities. It has, therefore, been with great satisfaction that the editors have been able to obtain from educational leaders the desired essays. The articles by the editors have been composed with painstaking care...
...late first citizen greeted on the twentieth of March, 1924? Messages from near and far were by no means the extent to which the country disturbed herself to honor her stalwart son. An Honorary Committee of Citizens, of which the President of the United States was chairman, two living ex-Presidents, the Governor of Massachusetts, and the Premier of Canada, Vice-Chairmen, had been appointed to represent the public. The members of the committee were prominent citizens of the United States and Canada headed by the Governors of Connecticut, Rhode Island, New Hampshire, Vermont and Maine. Committees had also been...