Imágenes de páginas
PDF
EPUB

ration of Cambridge as a city.-W. H. Tillinghast is secretary of the Mass. Library Club. — A. H. Latham has been elected a member of the Brookline Town Committee.-Prof. Barrett Wendell is a member of the Examining Board of the Boston Public Library. Lawrence Bond was the Citizens' and Democratic candidate for the Mass. Senate from the Newton district. - E. D. Morgan was one of the syndicate which built the yacht Defender for the recent race with the Valkyrie for the America's cup.- Freeman Hunt, Dem., was candidate for district attorney for Middlesex County, Mass.

[blocks in formation]

1878.

Jos. C. WHITNEY, Sec.

Box 3573, Boston.

During the autumn, Prof. H. S. Nash conducted services as University Preacher at Cornell.-P. V. R. Ely has been reëlected vice-president of the Boston Stock Exchange.

1879.

FRANCIS ALMY, Sec.

Buffalo, N. Y.

H. O. Apthorp was a delegate to the Mass. Democratic State Convention. C. F. Sprague is president of the Jamaica Club. G. v. L. Meyer has been reëlected to the Mass. House of Representatives. He was recently chosen a vice-president of the Boston Merchants Club.-J. G. Thorp is president of the Cambridge Social Union. -F. M. Ware is secretary of the Newport, R. I., Clambake Club. G. R. Sheldon has been appointed a director of the reorganized Northern Pacific R. R. Co. - - Livingston Cushing has been elected a trustee of the Boston Free Hospital for Women.

[ocr errors]
[blocks in formation]
[blocks in formation]
[ocr errors]

DR. C. R. SANGER, Sec. 3040 Washington Ave., St. Louis, Mo. Frederic Reed, formerly master in the Roxbury Latin School, has removed to Philadelphia and taken charge of the newly organized Chestnut Hill Academy, in the Chestnut Hill district of that city. Dr. R. W. Lovett has removed to 234 Marlboro' St., Boston.-C. Sprague returned in October from a foreign trip which took him into Russia. - A London correspondent in the September Bookman says: “Nor should I omit to mention Mr. Henry Norman, the literary editor of the [London] Daily Chronicle, and one of the most versatile men in the world. . . . His journeys and studies in the Far East have given him a place of almost unique authority among political journalists, while as a critic and student of literature he stands among the foremost. His collections of first editions, particularly of American first editions, is almost unrivaled. . . . Mr. Norman does much political work for the Chronicle, but his special task is the preparation of the literary page, which he has made a great and recognized force. The Daily Chronicle is almost the only paper of the kind in England which collects and publishes original literary

information. Few things escape Mr. Norman's vigilant eye, and he has greatly widened his field lately by becoming a member of the Committee of the Society of Authors. . . . [His] wife is well known as the author of A Girl of the Carpathians' and Gallia.'"- Albert Thorndike is secretary of the Weston Golf Club. — Curtis Guild presided at the Mass. Republican State Convention in Boston, and took an active part in the recent campaign. — J. P. Farnsworth has been reëlected secretary for Providence of the Rhode Island Harvard Club.-J. C. Morse is a member of the Brookline Town Committee. The new Chicago Public Library, of which C. A. Coolidge is the architect, is nearly completed.-E. W. Atkinson has taken a house at 251 Beacon St., Boston.

1882.

H. W. CUNNINGHAM, Sec.

89 State St., Boston.

H. W. Hardon has been appointed professor of Law at Cornell University.-J. R. Bishop has been made principal of the recently dedicated Walnut Hill High School, at Cincinnati, O.-E. H. Pendleton was Democratic candidate from Hamilton County for the Ohio Senate, at the recent election. — Dr. John McGregor Cochrane died of heart disease at Somerville, Mass, on August 6. Born and educated in Cambridge, he took a three-years' course in the Harvard Medical School after his graduation from college. He studied in England for a year, and then began practice in Boston, where he was on the staff of the Mass. General Hospital. He was a member of the Mass. Medical Society, the Scots Charitable Society, and a life member of St. Thomas' Hospital

of London. A widow and son survive. Prescott Lawrence is a director of the Newport, R. I., Clambake Club. At the last quarterly meeting of the Mass. Association of the Boards of Health, Dr. H. L. Chase read a pa"Efficient Disinfection." - Dr. per on F. N. Cole has been appointed to a new professorship in Mathematics at Columbia College. — Prof. J. H. Beale, Jr., has been appointed chairman of the Harvard Athletic Committee. Rev. J. McG. Foster of Bangor is taking a vacation in Europe, and is attending lectures at the University at Berlin. James H. Bacon has just completed his work as chief engineer in the work of the government in improving the St. John's River, Florida. -F. L. Washburn has been made professor of Biology at the State University at Eugene, Oregon.

1883.

FREDERICK NICHOLS, Sec.

2 Joy St., Boston.

The Class Report progresses slowly, only about half the "band of brothers" having been heard from up to a date as late as October 15. The Secretary has felt, however, that the delay will be of little moment if completeness and accuracy be thereby insured. A. B. Babbitt is classical master in the De Lancey School of Philadelphia, Pa., where he has had the pleasure of preparing a number of young men for Harvard.-W. W. Bryant has decided not to return to Calcutta, and will accept some business position in Boston or New York. -F. L. Clark has been, for the past two years, receiver of the First National Bank of Spokane, Wash.-J. R. Coolidge has been reappointed by the Overseers a member of the Committee on Spanish for the year 1895

96.- Asst. Prof. Edward Cummings has been reappointed by the Overseers a member of the Administrative Board for Harvard College for the year 1895-96. He will conduct three courses in the Department of Economics, viz.: two full courses, Development of the Modern State, and of its Social Functions; and The Social and Economic Condition of Workingmen in the United States and in Other Counand one half-course, Communism tries; and Socialism: Utopias, Ancient and Modern. Besides these, he will have part charge of a half-course in the English Department, Oral Discussion of Topics in History and Economics; and will also assist in conducting a Seminary in Economics, primarily for graduates, to guide competent students in research on subjects assigned after consultation. - Waldo Fuller is employed in the office of the Japan Mining Company at Telluride, Colo. -C. H. Grandgent has been reappointed by the Overseers a member of the committees on Romance Philology and Italian for the year 1895–96.

- Chas. S. Hamlin has been actively engaged on the stump throughout the Massachusetts State campaign, his addresses being devoted almost entirely to discussion of the financial question. — E. C. Howell is assistant city editor of the Boston Herald. - Dr. H. B. Jacobs is connected with the Nervous Department of the Johns Hopkins Hospital at Baltimore, and is one of the visiting physicians to the City Insane Hospital. F. E. Jennison is now a member of the banking and brokerage firm of Dunscomb & Jennison, at 59 Wall St., New York city. — F. W. Kaan was renominated, on Sept. 25, for representative to the Massachusetts legislature from Somerville, winning in the caucus by 10

votes over a combination of Demo- School, and physician to out-patients

crats and A. P. A. sympathizers who at the Massachusetts General Hossought to punish him for his independ- pital. E. P. Warren has loaned to ence.- - P. M. Keating was a mem- the Fogg Art Museum at Cambridge ber of the Committee on Credentials at a collection of Greek vases, some of the Massachusetts Democratic Conven- which are of great beauty. - C. E. tion of Oct. 2; and C. C. Nichols was L. Wingate has been reappointed by placed on the Committee on Permanent the Overseers a member of the ComOrganization. — A. C. Lane is assist-mittee on English Literature for the ant State geologist of Michigan, his work having been done largely on the Marquette, Gogebic, and other iron ranges of that State. - Asst. Prof. A. R. Marsh will conduct two courses in the Department of Comparative Literature at Harvard during 1895-96, viz.: The History of Latin Literature in the Middle Ages (beginning with the 4th century), and its Relations to Classic and Modern Literature; and Mediaeval Literature in the Vulgar Tongues, with especial reference to the influence of France and Provence; also, one course in the Spanish Department, with Mr. Fletcher, Spanish Grammar, Reading, and Composition (Modern Novels and Plays, El Eco de Madrid). The Rev. W. E. Nies is missionary in charge of the Church of the Ascension at Rockville Centre, L. I., a mission of the Cathedral at Garden City.L. R. E. Paulin has removed from Bloomfield to Aztec, San Juan County, N. M., but spends most of his time at Fort Wingate, 100 miles away, where he has entered into a contract to supply beef for the United States Government Post at that place. Asst. Prof. H. L. Smyth will have charge of the same three half-courses as last year, in the Department of Geology at Harvard, during 1895-96, viz.: Geological Surveying; Mining Geology, and PreCambrian Geology of North America.

- Dr. A. K. Stone is instructor in Bacteriology at the Harvard Medical

year 1895-96. — Dr. E. S. Jack is
medical examiner for the third Mid-
dlesex district of Massachusetts, and
is on the surgical staff of the Mel-
rose Hospital. William T. Peirce
is now acting as "captain" for the
Vallecillo Mining Company, owners of
a large silver lead mine in the State of
Nuevo Leon, Mexico, about 150 miles
south of the Rio Grande.-Wallace
Rice has abandoned the practice of
law, and is now foreign editor of the
Chicago Tribune.-F. W. Morton is
on the staff of the Chicago Times-Her-
ald.-Jos. Lee is vice-president of
the Children's Bureau Association, re-
cently organized to improve the meth-
ods of caring for the poor and neg-
lected children in the charge of the
Commonwealth of Massachusetts.
J. A. Noyes has been appointed by
the Corporation editor of the Quin-
quennial Catalogue.-L. A. Coolidge
has received the insignia of the Order
of the Cross from the King of Trini-
dad.-F. W. Kaan, Rep., has been
reëlected to the Mass. House of Rep-
resentatives.-H. V. Hayes is a mem-
ber of the American Academy.

1884.

EDWARD A. HIBBARD, Sec.

111 Broadway, New York, N. Y.

L. E. Sexton was the candidate of the State Democracy for State Senator in the 13th senatorial district of New York city. W. S. Jackman is a member of the executive council of

the recently formed Herbart Society. - R. S. Minturn was on the 25th District New York Good Government Club campaign committee in the recent campaign. -E. L. Conant is practicing law at 2 Wall St., New York.-T. J. Coolidge, Jr., is a member of the Reorganization Committee of the New York & New England R. R. Co.-Frank Hamlin is asst. corporation counsel of the city of Chicago. — Gordon Abbott is vicepresident of the reorganized New York & New England R. R. Co. Dunlap Smith is president of the Chicago Real Estate Board.

1885.

HENRY M. WILLIAMS, Sec.

28 State St., Boston. Messrs. Nutter and Simpkins are on the committees to visit the University.-J. W. Bemis continues his connection with the new Department of Architecture for another year. -It is reported that Sheridan P. Read, U. S. Consul at Tien-Tsin, China, has been appointed by President Cleveland one of the independent commissioners which this government has sent to investigate the Kucheng outrages. The Class Secretary has changed his address from 39 Court St. to 28 State St., Boston. - Wm. H. Baldwin, Jr., has been advanced from third to second vice-president of the Southern Railway. His duties in the management of the road will be much the same as before. - R. S. Bickford, who has been for a few years in the West at Helena, Mont., has returned to Boston, where he is engaged in the bond and investment brokerage busi-F. I. Carpenter has received the degree of Ph. D. from the University of Chicago.

ness.

[ocr errors]

1886.

DR. J. H. HUDDLESTON, Sec.

126 West 85th St., New York, N. Y. Frank Anthony Luques was drowned while bathing in the Saco River near Biddeford, Me., Aug. 8. After his graduation from college in 1886 he studied art in this country and Europe, and gave promise of distinction in his profession. For a time he lived in Boston, but later he had a studio in New York. — The Rev. L. B. Macdonald has received a call from the First Parish Church of Concord. - Henry Augustus Richards died at Weymouth, Oct. 8. Soon after his graduation he went into business with his father in Quincy and Weymouth. He was a member of the Orphans Hope Lodge, F. A. M., of the Knights Templar, and for several years of the 1st Corps of Cadets. A widow survives. F. T. Cooper received the degree of Ph. D. at Columbia College in June. Dr. J. H. Huddleston, according to the N. Y. Times, "has been promoted to be assistant surgeon and captain of of the Seventh Regiment, National Guard, State of New York, vice Collis promoted. He has been a private in Company A of the Seventh, and is now connected with Gouverneur Hospital, and also is an instructor in Bellevue Hospital Medical College." - Ed.

1887.

GEORGE P. FURBER, Sec.

53 State St., Boston.

[ocr errors]

In the Lowell Free Lectures at the Mass. Institute of Technology, Boston, for 1895-96, Course XII, on Contemporary European History and Politics (12 lectures), is given by Asst. Prof. C. F. A. Currier, and Course XIV, on Differential Calculus (12 lectures), by Asst. Prof. F. H. Bailey.-Prof. J. H. Robinson is professor of History

« AnteriorContinuar »