Word: oscar
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...Appleton Chapel at 5 o'clock this afternoon. Rev. Lyman Abbott h.'90, D.D., LL.D., of New York, will conduct the service and the following musical program will be rendered: "Give unto the Lord," Parkes: "The Lord is my Light," Allitsen; "Even Me," Warren. The soloist will be Mr. Oscar Huntting. The front seats are reserved for students and for officers of the University and their friends until 4.55 o'clock...
...Lloyd William Brooke, Salt Lake City, Utah. Robert Wayne Byerly, Cambridge. Tien Lin Chao, Tientsin, China. Philip Greeley Clapp, Roxbury. Kevork Costikyan, London, Eng. Roy Wilson Follett, North Attleboro. Alfred Arthur Jenkins, Scranton, Pa. Sidney Fiske Kimball, Dorchester. Hans von Kaltenborn, Madison, Wis. Oscar Gottfried Mayer, Chicago, Ill. Norman Burdett Nash, Cambridge. Harold Everett Porter, New York, N. Y. Fletcher Nichols Robinson, Southern Pines, N. C. William Green Roelker, Jr., Newport, R. I. Robert Emmons Rogers, Cambridge. Charles Milton Rogerson, Milton. George Emlen Roosevelt, New York, N. Y. Frederic Schenck, Lenox. Lee Simonson, New York, N. Y. Paul Dawes Turner...
...Germans in the University. Professor F. G. Peabody, the first foreign exchange professor, will talk on "The Harvard Exchange Professor Abroad"; then a speech by Professor Kuehnemann will close the meeting, which is open to members of the University. Among the guests especially invited will be Professor Oscar Montelius, the noted Swedish archaeologist of Stockholm, and Professor E. von Mach of Cambridge, England...
...enthusiastic sky-pilots, will steer into mid-stream. Fairly bound for Nantasket Point, the keg-tappers start their work. On arriving at the Point, baseball games, track meets and swimming races will occupy the time until the tempting odor of a barbecue announces the serving of a collation by Oscar, of the Waldorf. Singing by class talent will beguile the post-prandial half-hour. At about 4.30 the "King Philip" will again weigh anchor and proceed to Rowe's Wharf...
...following Intercollegiate Civic League article on "The National Department of Commerce and Labor" is written by Hon. Oscar S. Straus, Secretary of that department. Mr. Straus was born in Atterberg, Rhenish Bavaria, but came to this country early in life. His first important diplomatic office after his graduation from Columbia was his appointment in 1887 by President Cleveland as United States Minister to Turkey. He was elected a member of the permanent court of arbitration at the Hague six years ago, and entered his present position last year...