Word: resignations
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...illustrious by the late Barrett Wendell, as an "electric person" to whom all manner of Harvard officials, from the President down, enter for weighty conference or valued advice. Of Mr. Whitney the pamphleteer cried: "What meteoric rise is this! . . . All the requisites but age, and President Lowell does not resign...
Howard Corning '90, Executive Secretary of the Harvard Fund Council, has been chosen a member of the Research Staff of the Graduate School of Business Administration. Mr. Corning has been forced to resign the position which he has held since 1925, and D. T. W. McCord 18. Publicity Manager for the fund, has been appointed acting Executive Secretary in his place...
...Pacific fleet. So Midshipman Zirkle, who might have been an ensign with greater pay and privileges, with the opportunity of an honorable discharge in two years, is still a "middy" as long as the Navy wants to keep him. It is expected, however, that he will be allowed to resign in two years when the spirit of the regulation will have been served. The question: if young Midshipman Zirkle is really a pacifist, why should an ensign's commission have greater horrors for him than the midshipman's rank...
...stampeded, Mr. Meighen took no such precipitant action last week, but issued a brief statement promising that his Cabinet would resign at once...
When the owner of a newspaper thus expresses himself one of three things is sure to happen: the owner will in his next utterance dismiss the editor, or the editor will buy out the owner, or the editor will resign. When Lord Rothermere in August made the quoted statement readers of the London Daily Mail waited to see how Editor Thomas Marlowe would react; last week they saw. Editor Marlowe resigned...