Word: lishman
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Lyon Boston, of New York City; Charles Hickling Bradford, of Boston; Laurence Eliot Bunker, of Wellesley Hills; Frank Morton Carpenter, of Cambridge; Leonard Phyneas Dantzig, of Chicago, III.: Thomas Carr Howe, Jr. of Indianapolis, Ind.: Robert William Lishman, of Lynn: Theodore Benedict Massell, of Brookline; William lehabod Nichols, of Wilton Conr John Mikon Potter, of Milwaukee, Wis: Carl Joseph Bush, of Cincinnati, Ohio; Leopold Urtel Shapiro, of Boston; Hymen Theodore Silverstein, of Mattapan; Davidson Sommers, of St. Paul, Minn.; Wilfred Shafer Stone, of La Grange...
...Holland Sever 31 Howard-Macdonald Sever 32 MacKinnon-Shea Sever 35 Silbert-Zaia Sever 36 Chemistry 3 Geol. Lect. Rm. Chemistry 21 Sever 26 Class. Philol. 43 Sever 26 Economics 14 Emerson A Engin. Sciences 7b Pierce 304 English 3b. Emerson J English 11b Andrew-Finkelstein Sever 5 Finney-Lishman Sever 6 Ludlam-Worcester Sever 11 Fine Arts 1d Ahl-Higginson Fogg Lect. Room Hill-Zanetti Emerson D Fine Arts 2f Robinson Hall French 7 Adie-French Harvard 3 Gallary-Woodward Harvard 6 German 1b Sem. Mus. 1 History 6 Harvard 2 History 23b Emerson A History 24b Emerson...
...Holland Sever 31 Howard-Macdonald Sever 32 MacKinnon-Shea Sever 35 Silbert-Zaia Sever 36 Chemistry 3 Geol. Lect. Rm. Chemistry 21 Sever 26 Class. Philol. 43 Sever 26 Economics 14 Emerson A Engin. Sciences 7b Pierce 304 English 3b. Emerson J English 11b Andrew-Finkelstein Sever 5 Finney-Lishman Sever 6 Ludlam-Worcester Sever 11 Fine Arts 1d Ahl-Higginson Fogg Lect. Room Hill-Zanetti Emerson D Fine Arts 2f Robinson Hall French 7 Adie-French Harvard 3 Gallary-Woodward Harvard 6 German 1b Sem. Mus. 1 History 6 Harvard 2 History 23b Emerson A History 24b Emerson...
...Reynolds, Chairman, Miss Pyiscilla Bryant, E. A. Sanford, Miss Althea Payson; Murray Campbell, Miss Anne Waterman; W. C. McFerran, Miss Lottie Connolly; R. W. Lishman, Miss Fannie Chase...
...debate with Wesleyan, which took place in Paine Hall, was won by the visitors by a 2 to 1 vote of the judges. R. W. Lishman '26, first speaker for the University, pointed out that the number of working children in this country was tremendous and that the states do not regulate this labor either fairly or uniformly. He was followed by H. N. Eggleston of Wesleyan, who stated that the states had improved conditions and would continue to do so. The second speaker for the affirmative was Barrett Williams '28, who said the separate states would necessarily fail...