Word: mr
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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Wallace Brett Donham '98, vice-president of the Old Colony Trust Company of Boston, has been appointed Dean of the Graduate School of Business Administration. This announcement was made last night at the close of a meeting of the Board of Overseers. Mr. Donham succeeds Edwin F. Gay, who recently resigned his Harvard position to become president of the New York Evening Post Company...
After his graduation from College Mr. Donham entered the Law School and received his degree in 1901, whereupon he entered the legal department of the Old Colony Trust Company. He has been for many years the vice-president of the company, and he is now director in several other large concerns, including the Liberty Mutual Insurance Company, the Clinchfield Coal Company, the Haverhill Gaslight Company, and the Raymond and Whitcomb Company. He is president of the Dallas Electric Company. During the war he acted for a time as assistant executive manager of the Massachusetts Committee of Public Safety. More recently...
...Mr. Williams was captain of one of the most successful tennis teams the University ever had. He won the Inter-collegiates in 1915, and has been twice National singles champion, Mr. Williams is the second former University tennis captain to favor making tennis a major sport, N. W. Niles '09 having expressed the same opinion in the CRIMSON last spring...
...What is Mr. Rosenblatt, in his recent letter to the CRIMSON, trying to prove to us? He "agrees . . . . in condemning lynching, but asks any man what he would have done were he a resident of an ordinarily well-conducted and prosperous community in which such crimes had been perpetrated." If this implies anything more than a mere thirst for information, which can easily be gratified by asking any man verbally, it implies that lynching is the only possibility; that the said resident has no way open to him of improving the legal and police administration of his city save that...
...writer does not apologize for the outbreak, but merely attempts to explain it cause. . . . only to be expected . . . . who can answer for . . . . No wonder . . . ." Moral censure is certainly an ugly thing, and one likes to see it deprecated; but such deprecation to be effective should be consistent. If Mr. Rosenblatt writes in this truly Christian spirit of the lynching, then the least he can say of the original assault is that criminals will be criminals; that, in view of the number of uneducated negroes in town, such incidents were "only to be expected"; that "who can answer for the foolhardy...