Word: livingstons
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...College Entrance Examination Board, was headmaster of Newark Academy from 1901 until he be came emeritus last year. Brother Max, 67, prime authority on the Constitution, is now research director of Los Angeles' rich Henry E. Huntington Library & Art Gallery. More famed than either is gentle, witty Brother Livingston, 69, who in his 15 years as president of Cornell University has enriched that old school spiritually and materially. To Brother Livingston, an M. D., Cornell owes its new $60,000,000 Manhattan Medical Centre, many a renowned scholar drawn to Cornell's campus by Lake Cayuga outside Ithaca...
Ralph J. Baker, professor of Law, W. Barton Beach, Joseph H. Beals '82, Royall Professor of Law; Henry B. Cabot '17, assistant professor in the Institute of Criminal Law; Morton C. Campbell, professor of Law; George K. Gardner '12, professor of Law; Livingston Hall, assistant professor of Law; John A. Macguire, professor of Law; Pound; Warren A Seavey '01, professor of Law; James B. Thayer '21, professor of Law; Edward H. Warren '95, professor of Law; and Samuel Williston '82, Dane Professor of Law, composed the group who sent a statement to the Republican State Committee, telling of their intention...
Among these "advisory editors," whose billing in the magazine carefully relieves them of responsibility for its contents, are Cornell's Livingston Farrand, Wisconsin's President Glenn Frank, Author Angelo Patri, Chief Scout James E. West, many a child psychologist, teacher, pediatrician...
...little Senator James Francis Byrnes's victory in South Carolina over fiery Thomas Porcher Stoney, onetime Mayor of Charleston, and gaunt Colonel William C. Harllee, retired Marine (TIME, Aug. 24). Jimmy Byrnes squeaked into the Senate in 1930 with 120,000 primary votes to 116,000 for Coleman Livingston Blease. Last week, with 250,000 votes to 37,000 for his two anti-New Deal opponents combined, the President's Senate contact man piled up the biggest majority South Carolina had ever given a State-wide candidate...
...Robert R. Livingston put the treaty through; the next Congress appropriated the money; nobody carried the case to the Supreme Court; and, as a result, Louisiana and Arkansas and Missouri and Iowa and Minnesota and Kansas and Montana and North Dakota and South Dakota and the larger portions of Wyoming and Colorado and Nebraska and Oklahoma fly the Stars & Stripes today...