Word: mayors
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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Fourth, this club recommend that the Mayor appoint a committee representative of the city government, of Harvard University, and of the citizens of Cambridge at large to consider the great interests of the city for the more suitable arrangement of streets about and approaches to the College grounds...
President Eliot has accepted the invitation of Mayor Fitzgerald to deliver the annual Fourth of July oration in Boston this summer. The custom of delivering an annual civic oration commemorating a national event was started March 5, 1783, the anniversary of the Boston massacre, when James Lovell was the speaker. Later the occasion was changed to July 4 to commemorate in addition the signing of the Declaration of Independence...
...late afternoon over Minneapolis and St. Paul, and in the evening by class dinners with a general smoker. Saturday will be spent in recreation, and in the evening the annual banquet will be held at the St. Paul Hotel. Among the speakers will be President Lowell, N. Clifford '90, Mayor of Portland, Me., G. von L. Meyer '79, Secretary of the Navy, and A. E. Willson '69, governor of Kentucky...
While in Manchester, the University team was entertained by Mayor Smith. The summary: HARVARD. MANCHESTER. Chadwick, g. g., Hartley Barron, r.f.b. l.f.b., Butler Baldwin, Morriss, l.f.b. r.f.b., Cunnion Richard, r.h.b. l.h.b., Brown Eaton, c.h.b. c.h.b., Davidson Hallowell, l.h.b. r.h.b., Stewart Needham, r.o.f. l.o.f., McCoo Prescott, r.i.f. l.i.f., Pollack Greene, c.f. c.f., Meikle Seamans, l.i.f. r.i.f. Parkinson Byng, l.o.f. r.o.f., Addison...
...short play by David Carb '09, which follows Mr. Eaton's article, is a specimen of what our eager young dramatists are planning to give us, a more efficient censorship than that sporadically exercised by the Mayor of Boston will be necessary. "The Easiest Way" was a brutal play, dealing frankly with a brutal subject, but it at least succeeded in making vice hideous. Mr. Carb's play, "The Other Side," attempts to inform the reader (the play is fortunately too short for the stage) that for a woman there is more chance of happiness in vice than in unmarried...