Word: naming
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Chairmen or representatives of divisions or departments are denoted by an asterisk (*), with the name of the department following. Where the place is bracketed [ ] the instructor will be represented, at the time and place specified, by some other person. Addresses followed by an asterisk (*) are in Boston; all others are in Cambridge. The Lower Reading Room is on the ground floor of the Harry Elkins Widener Memorial Library and is entered by the door on the west side, opposite Weld Hall. Rooms in Widener indicated by letters are on the upper story--numbered rooms are studies, and may be reached...
Chairmen or representatives of divisions or departments are denoted by an asterisk (*), with the name of the department following. Where the place is bracketed [ ] the instructor will be represented, at the time and place specified, by some other person. Addresses followed by an asterisk (*) are in Boston; all others are in Cambridge. The Lower Reading Room is on the ground floor of the Harry Elkins Widener Memorial Library and is entered by the door on the west side, opposite Weld Hall. Rooms in Widener indicated by letters are on the upper story-numbered rooms are studies, and may be reached...
...Corporation voted to establish the Royal all Chair of Law and appointed Isaac Parker to fill it; and two years later a law school was organized as a separate department. From this small beginning the School grew through penury and even opposition to some strength and influence, as the name of Judge Story on its Faculty amply shows. It gave system and dignity to the otherwise disorganized study of law in ante-bellum days...
...Magazine contains, as usual, a prolixity of excellent things. Besides an array of substantial articles, there is a complete record of student affairs and athletics during the past months, togeth-with other information of all sorts which interests Harvard men. The undergraduate should not be frightened away by the name; for the Graduates' Magazine contains a most complete and convenient account of his own multifarious doings. And it enters upon its twenty-fourth year with strong promise of continuing unbroken the series of splendid volumes which have hitherto made it indispensable in Harvard circles and have extended its influence...
...University who are interested in agricultural work has been so satisfactory during the four months since the founding of the organization that the graduates feel justified in making it permanent. The order of business to come before the meeting will therefore be as follows: the selection of a name for the association; consideration of the desirability of affiliation with similar organizations with other colleges; discussion of the proposed plan of summer meetings; fixation of a membership fee; consideration of the establishment of an office in Cambridge where information can be assembled and distributed to members; election of permanent officers...