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...considered are the domestic life of the common people, police methods, the amount and kind of crime prevailing at different periods, conditions of trial, methods of punishment, state of the prisons, and the history of certain celebrated crimes in the past century. The course will have one two-hour session each week, devoted to lectures and discussion, and weekly reports on the investigation of special topics will be required. Students electing the course will be expected to have such a knowledge of methods of investigation as can be gained from History 9 or 13. At the first meeting...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Course in the History of Crime. | 2/13/1900 | See Source »

Professor Beale will give a new half course during the second half year on the History of Crime in England and America. The course, which is officially known as History 29, will have but one two hour session a week, at a period to be decided later. The work will consist of lectures, reports and discussions, and investigation of special topics...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: New History Course. | 1/30/1900 | See Source »

There are fourteen Harvard graduates in the fifty-sixth Congress which is now in session, of whom four are senators and ten are representatives. Nine of the representatives served also in the fifty-fifth Congress. The names and states represented are as follows: Senators--Edward Oliver Wolcott L. S., '75, from Colorado; George Frisbie Hoar '46, and Henry Cabot Lodge '71, from Massachusetts; and Boies Penrose '81, from Pennsylvania. Representatives -- Henry S. Boutell '76, George E. Foss '85, and Vespasian Warner L.S. '68, from Illinois; William H. Moody '76, Henry F. Naphen L. S. '78, and Charles F. Sprague...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Harvard Men in Congress | 1/10/1900 | See Source »

...American Historical Association held the final session of its fifteenth annual meeting last Friday at Cambridge. "Foreign Relations" was the general subject for the morning session which was held in Sanders Theatre. Among the papers read on this topic were, "Democracy and Diplomacy," by Professor S. M. Macvane '73; "The Mexican Question of 1847-8," by Professor E.G. Bourne of Yale University; "The Government of Foreigners," by Professor John Bach McMaster of the University of Pennsylvania, and "The Samoan Question," by Baron Spech von Steinberg, of the German Embassy...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: American Historical Association | 1/3/1900 | See Source »

...Hero Physician," which was illustrated with lantern slides. Professor F. W. Putnam spoke on "Ancient Pueblos of the Chaco Canon," Mr. G. H. Chase on "Terra Cottas from the Argive Heraeum," and Mr. C. P. Bowditch on "Central American Archaeology." The last named presided over the Thursday session. A significant fact was shown by the statement of Dr. Talcott Williams of Philadelphia that $11,000,000 had been spent during the last ten years for museums and researches in the realm of archaeology...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The New Haven Conventions. | 1/3/1900 | See Source »

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