Word: williams
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...candidates, with a view toward determining the most logical choice. Anyone is privileged to bring into the discussion every candidate who appeals to them as well-qualified to represent the Republican party as chief executive. Among those who will probably figure most prominently in the discussion will be Professor William H. Taft, Senator J. W. Weeks, Senator Elihu Root, Senator Theodore E. Burton, Colonel Theodore Roosevelt, former Vice-President Charles W. Fairbanks, and Justice Charles E. Hughes. The meeting is open to all members of the Union, the Speaker's Club, and the University Debating Council...
...formal debate, directed toward the possible Republican candidates for the next Presidency, with a view to determining the most logical choice among the men now under consideration. Among those whose qualifications for the office of chief executive will be considered will be Colonel Theodore Roosevelt '80, Professor William H. Taft, Justice Charles E. Hughes, Senator Theodore E. Burton, Elihu Root, former Vice President Charles W. Fairbanks, and Senator J. W. Weeks...
...President and Fellows the following appointments were made: George Richards Minot '08, Harry Linenthal '00, and Harold Bowditch '05, assistants in medicine; Ernest Gray '01 and Albert Ehrenfried '02, assistants in surgery; Robert Bayley Osgood '99, instructor in surgery; Raymond Stanton Titus '05, alumni assistant in obstetrics; William Richard Ohler '10, Austin Teaching Fellow in Bacteriology; John Kirtland Wright '13, assistant in military science; Francis Weld Peabody '03, consulting physician to the Collis P. Huntington Memorial Hospital; Robert Battey Greenough '92, surgeon-in-charge of the Collis P. Huntington Memorial Hospital; Edward Hammond Risley '06, assistant surgeon to the Collis...
...William Henry Meeker '17, of New York N. Y., will attend as the representative of the CRIMSON...
...student loafer,--and who is not at least partially one?--would do well just at this time to read William James's essay on "Habit." Man soon becomes a mere walking bundle of habits, he observes; the character of the habits determines the character of the man. And a habit, acquired in the next few days of applying one's self to study at regular intervals for six hours each day will do wonders in removing that probation, or bringing up those grades which must be brought...