Word: civility
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...assistant in the Library in charge of the Archives,--a position which gave him an opportunity to study and to write. In 1901-1902 he was University Lecturer in Modern History, giving a half-course on "The Constitutional and Political History of the United States since the Civil...
Instructors. Sheldon Smith Yates, Civil Engineering; Chester Laurens Dawes, Emory Leon Chaffee, and Harold Gilliland Crane, Electrical Engineering; John Wymond Miller Bunker, Sanitary Analysis; Melville Conley Whipple, Sanitary Chemistry; Horace Upham Ranson, Civil Engineering; Edward Russell Markham, Shopwork; Walter Scott Weeks, Mining; Harold Broadfield Warren, Freehand Drawing; Hermann Dudley Murphy; Drawing from the Life; Henry Atherton Frost, Architecture; Roger Noble Burnham, Modelling; David Locke Webster, Applied Mechanics; Charles Obstetrics; Robert Montraville Green,eering...
...clock. The cause of his death was an absess of the brain, following an illness of one week. While in college, Mr. Bishop was very prominent in class affairs and was an editor of the Lampoon. After his graduation, he went to Columbia where he received a degree in civil engineering in 1905. The greater part of the time since graduation has been spent in the employ of the United Railroads of San Francisco. He is survived by his wife Katherine Marvin Bishop, of San Francisco. The funeral will be held at the Waterman Chapel, 2328 Washington Street, Boston, tomorrow...
Almost one hundred Harvard Civil War Veterans attended the Annual Memorial Day Exercises in Sanders Theatre yesterday. Veterans from the Charles Beck Post joined the Harvard graduates in the Yard and escorted them to the auditorium...
...Civil War was anything but an unmixed evil. Patriotism prompted both sides and so with the bravery of northern soldiers "all the brave deeds of southern men are part of the common heritage of American glory. Moreover, we all know that the young men and youths who took part in that war were made better men, morally, mentally, and physically. Such service ever has been the great counteracting influence against the selfish aims and cares of everyday life. A man who engages in trade or toil, buys and sells by the yard and pound, and as the years roll...