Word: laws
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Joseph R. Hamlen '04 resigned last night as general secretary of the Harvard Alumni Association in order to enter business in Boston. He will become director for New England of Rudolph Guenther-Russell Law Incorporated, financial advertisers of New York, City. No successor has as yet been chosen...
...with a discussion of the House plan, the reading periods, and other topics of the College, one may find a revelation of progress in the Medical or Dental School; plans for work in a South African astronomical observatory follow those for extension of a system of research professorships in law. An Athletic program and a list of changes in degree requirements in the School of Education find their places in what seems more and more to be a pattern, complete in the very oneness of its figures...
Died. Edwin S. Bayer, 59, president of famed Julius Kayser & Co. (hosiery, underwear) son-in-law of Founder Julius Kayser; after an operation; in Manhattan...
...late Levi P. Morton, chairman, and the late Alexander J. Hemphill, president. Among their vice presidents was swarthy Charles Hamilton Sabin, Massachusetts farmer's son who in youth had been a flour dealer's clerk, and blond William Chapman Potter, Chicago-born mining engineer. The two were brothers-in-law, their wives the daughters of the late Paul Morton, variously President of the Burlington Railroad, Secretary of the Navy under Roosevelt. President of the Equitable. Mr. Potter still fondly calls himself a mining engineer, rather than a banker. He was long associated with the Guggenheims. For a period he even...
...took command of the Herald at the end of the Civil War, spending more time in Europe than in the U. S., continuing his flamboyant exploits. But his word was law, whether shouted across his New York desk or cabled from Paris. He had two supreme maxims...