Word: mr
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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After receiving a degree from both the College and the Law School here, Mr. Hapgood began newspaper work in 1893 and since then has been actively engaged in journalism. He was dramatic and literary critic for the New York Commercial Advertiser and for the "Bookman" until 1902, when he assumed the editorship of "Collier's Weekly." Under his guidance, that paper has since become one of the most widely read and most influential of the popular periodicals...
Believing that journalism in its best form is a subject but little understood today, and that the tone of modern journalism can be raised by an invasion of men of the right calibre, the CRIMSON invited Mr. Norman Hapgood, editor of Collier's Weekly, to speak on this subject before a Harvard audience. We are pleased to announce that Mr. Hapgood has consented to come to Cambridge on April 6, and to tell us what his experience as a successful editor has taught him of the opportunities offered by a journalistic career...
...Mr. Norman Hapgood '90, editor of "Collier's Weekly," will speak under the auspices of the CRIMSON on "Opportunities in Journalism" in the Living Room of the Union on Monday evening, April...
President Eliot has been selected by the Faculty of Northwestern University to deliver the N. W. Harris course of six lectures at that University this spring, from April 9 to 14 inclusive. This course was founded a little over a year ago from a bequest of Mr. Norman W. Harris, one of the foremost bankers of Chicago, and a trustee of Northwestern University, with the purpose "to stimulate scientific research of the highest type and bring the results before the students and friends of Northwestern University, and, through them, to all the world." By scientific research, is meant "scholarly investigation...
Just what results are to be expected from this recommendation it is difficult to prophesy. We have great faith in the efficiency of the Athletic Committee and of Mr. Garcelon to deal with the athletic problem to the satisfaction of all. The Committee knows best just what reforms are needed, and just what reductions are possible without injuring the status of the sport. It has done a great deal to eliminate some of the chief objections to intercollegiate sport, and it will undoubtedly do more. In the end its aim is to be a leader in necessary reform; but such...