Word: trusts
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...held in University Hall on Saturday to discuss the method of selecting American students to be given the scholarships at Oxford University established by the Cecil Rhodes bequest. The meeting was held at the invitation of Dr. G. W. Parkin of Toronto, representative in America of the Rhodes Scholarship Trust. Those present included representatives from the universities, colleges, and secondary schools of the three states mentioned. The principal topic under discussion was the question of whether the scholarships should be awarded only to college graduates or should also include those who have completed the work in the secondary schools...
...Connecticut, including representatives of the universities and colleges of those states will hold a conference this morning at 10 o'clock in the Faculty Room of University Hall, with Dr. George R. Parkin of Toronto, who is now in the United States as the representative of the Rhodes Scholarship Trust. Methods to be followed in allotting the Oxford Scholarships provided for American students by the Cecil Rhodes bequest, will be discussed. President Eliot will preside...
...representatives of the universities and colleges of Massachusetts, Rhode Island and Connecticut will hold a conference on Saturday, January 24, at 10 a. m., in University Hall, with Dr. George R. Parkin of Toronto, who is now in the United States as the representative of the Rhodes Scholarship Trust. Methods to be followed in allotting the Oxford Scholarships provided for American students by the Rhodes bequest will be discussed...
Harvard Law Review -- "The Harter Act," by F. Greene '89: "The Supreme Court and the Sherman Anti-Trust Act," by W. F. Dana '84: "Estoppel-Principal and Agent," by J. S. Ewart: "Discovery in Massachusetts," by F. W. Grinnell...
...Seniors argued that while trusts in their present condition are attended with undeniable evils, still the system as a whole is better than that of cut-throat competition from which it stated the trust had sprung through a natural growth. The Seniors submitted that the trust should be considered not only as it exists today but also from the standpoint of the ultimate condition which in the course of natural evolution it will attain. The Juniors objected to this interpretation, arguing that the consideration of the question should embrace only the trust as an actual condition of the present...