Word: moorfields
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Howard University (Negro, Washington, D. C.) Moorfield Storey, president of National Association for the Advancement of Colored People...
...Moorfield Storey '66, who was scheduled to speak at the Union tonight, under the auspices of the Democratic Club, will not be able to be present, it was announced last night, by the officers of the club. Orders from his physician have forced him to cancel his engagements. Consequently, there will be no meeting in the Union tonight, according to G. W. Smith '29, business manager...
...first speaker will be Moorfield Storey '66, a well known Boston Lawyer, scheduled to appear next Tuesday at 4 o'clock in the Faculty Room of the Union. Mr. Storey was president of the American Bar Association for many years and has written several books on legal subjects. "The Reform of Legal Procedure" and "The Conquest of the Philippines", are two of his best known works. He is expected to discuss either the Phillipines, dealing especially with their independence, or the Pan-American policy of the United States. The latter topic has been given a great deal of prominence during...
...Moorfield Storey '66 of Boston, and S. de J. Osborne 1G, of Guatemala City, Guatemala, will attack the administration's policy. Mr. Storey has played a very prominent role in the political world. President of the American Bar Association in 1898, he became prominent in the National Civil Service Reform League a few years later. In 1905 he was president of the Anti-Imperialist League. Mr. Storey delivered the God-kin lectures at the University in 1920. He has published a volume treating the question "What Shall We Do With Our Dependencies...
...District of Columbia Supreme Court, and in the Court of Appeals, Mr. Buckley won. Transfer of the property to Mrs. Curtis was prohibited. The lawyers of the Negro organizations?Moorfield Storey, Louis Marshall, Arthur B. Spingarn?fought the case in the Supreme Court. Last week Justice Sanford read the court's decision...