User:Lent
Amusing comment by another Wikipedian
[edit]“ | hidden because unclear whether vandalism or simply incomprehensible; neither leg curving or invisionment is in any dictionary at onelook.com. Before 1235, trousers were called leg curving and were typically worn during normal days. They were banned in church because of their invisionment by priests. | ” |
— User:Espoo, 199.198.212.17 (30 September 2015) (2022-11-03), "Trousers", Wikipedia, retrieved 2022-11-10{{citation}} : CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
|
Neat Edit Summary
[edit]I saw the article photo for Telecommunications engineering had a caption edited to "January 1942 at the end of the war".
Removing the silly trailing phase left me this version of the article and I wanted a nice edit summary.
A quick google search of unicode typopgraphy remove showed a neat delete right keyboard key, ⌦ .
Finding that this was called "ERASE TO THE RIGHT" ⌦ (U+2326), I used the site's own google search for "ERASE TO THE". After scrolling down past the ads, I was rewarded with "ERASE TO THE LEFT" ⌫(U+232B).
All this to make the Edit summary (Revert photo caption edit 19:02, 7 December 2019 . "January 1942⌦ at the end of the war⌫").
--Lent (talk) 10:59, 22 February 2020 (UTC)
Lazy Eight in fields outside of Mathematics
[edit]Plan for disambiguating Lazy Eight. As of 21 May 2010, Lazy Eight refers to VistaVision. There are many other meanings. Including:
Livestock branding (type of brand) Infinity (symbol) Airplane Maneuver see: CT-134 Musketeer.
http://www.google.com/search?client=opera&rls=en&q=Airplane+Flying+Handbook+lazy+eight&sourceid=opera&ie=utf-8&oe=utf-8 --Lent (talk) 17:43, 21 May 2010 (UTC)
I think it might make sense to link in cultural references to infinity symbol.
In particular, I've seen the "Lazy Eight" reference to infinity reflected
in Aviation [1], Cinema Lazy_Eight#History, Livestock branding, and even in Science Fiction. In Science Fiction, Larry Niven used the "Lazy Eight" as the name of a series of ships in his Known Space series of stories.
Lent 13:17, 7 April 2007 (UTC)
How do I do references?
[edit]If you know where in Wikipedia there is the "standard" way to do references, please link it here. Thanks!
I'm trying to clean up my references in pages like Bill_N._Lacy.
Turns out Wikipedia:Citing_sources is a good place to start :-)
Look here for something about me
[edit]- Random ramblings, see http://chrislent.googlepages.com
Sandbox
[edit]Past Cooper Union Presidents
[edit]Andrew Carnegie, 1901 Board of Directors
[edit]by 1901 Andrew Carnegie appointed to Board of Directors
Abram S. Hewitt
[edit] Written at Portland, Maine. "Our New York Letter. The Political Campaign—The Despotism of Tammany—Mr. Hewitt's. Defeat—The mayoralty—Peter Cooper—The Outlook In the State". Portland Daily Press. Vol. 16. New York, Oct. 28, 1878. 29 October 1878. p. 1 col. 7-8. Archived from the original on 2020-11-20. Retrieved 20 November 2020.{{cite news}}
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OCR Text: The circumstances which led to the connection of Mr. Abram S. Hewitt with the Cooper family have a tinge of romance about them. Edward Cooper was a student in Columbia College. Mr. Hewitt, two years his senior, was his tutor. In 1811 Peter Cooper decided to send his son on a tour in Europe, and engaged Mr. Hewitt to accompany him. They were shipwrecked, and picked up from off a floating spar in mid ocean by a passing vessel after experiencing terrible perils aud sufferings. This fellowship of danger naturally cemented their friendship, and on their return Mr. Cooper associated Mr. Hewitt with him in his business. He developed remarkable capacity for managing the affairs of the concern, and the firm of Cooper & Hewitt, which was soon after formed, grew to be one of the most extensive and prosperous iron houses in the United States. Mr. Hewitt with characteristic pride and independence lived frugally and exclusively upon his own earnings from the beginning. He acquired wealth with considerable rapidity, but he is indebted solely to his own energy and capacity for all that be has ever received. When his means sufficed be married the only daughter of Peter Cooper, and thus became a member of the family as well as a principal of the firm. He has always kept his city residence at the home of his father-in-law, although he has a fine country seat in a neighboring town in New Jersey. Peter Cooper occupies a large plain double house on the corner of Lexington Avenue aud 22d street, one block above Gramercy Park. His son Edward lives on the opposite corner. These houses were built by Mr. Cooper some twenty-five years ago. Cyrus W. Field’s house adjoins that of Peter Cooper, being located on the corner of 21st street and Lexington Avenue. David Dudley Field lives next door to them. Their houses front Gramercy Park. On the opposite side—20th street—stands Mr. Tilden's vast bachelor mansion, with grounds in the rear extending to 19th street. His next door neighbor is Clarkson N. Potter. These geographical notes are worthy of record in view of the prominent part Gramercy Park has been made to play in the history of recent political events and revelations. . . [...About the Democratic (Reform) slate for upcoming 1879 New York City Mayoral Election...] It would certainly be a graceful act for the electors of the metropolis to manifest their reverence for so excellent a citizen by bestowing the Chief Magistracy upon the son, who inherits his father’s virtues without sharing his weaknesses. The nomination is a most judicious one, and ought to be crowned with success. The other candidates [...] . . Alternate copy via Library of Congress: Humanities, National Endowment for the (1878-10-29). "The Portland daily press. [volume] (Portland, Me.) 1862-1921, October 29, 1878, Image 1". ISSN 2643-7597. Retrieved 2020-11-20.
Hewitt, Abram S (1965). Nevins, Allan (ed.). Selected writings, with Introduction by Nicholas Murray Butler. Port Washington, N.Y.: Kennikat Press. OCLC 264897.
Hewitt, Abram S (1965). "Secret History of the Election, 1876-77" (PDF). In Nevins, Allan (ed.). Selected writings, with Introduction by Nicholas Murray Butler. Port Washington, N.Y.: Kennikat Press. pp. 155–194. OCLC 264897. {{cite book}}
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Abram Hewitt gave the dedication. [1]
Abram Hewitt gave the principal address. [2]
Name change from Peter Cooper High School to Morris High School:
Hewitt, Abram S (1965) [First published 1937 by Columbia University Press]. "A Sheaf of Letters : To a committee in the Bronx, July 15, 1901" (PDF). In Nevins, Allan (ed.). Selected writings, with Introduction by Nicholas Murray Butler. Port Washington, N.Y.: Kennikat Press. pp. 381–382. OCLC 264897. I write this letter therefore for the purpose of enabling you to say to the Board of Education that the family of Mr. Cooper will not feel in the slightest degree disturbed by the change of name to "The Morris High School," but on the contrary they desire me to express their entire sympathy with the people of the Borough of the Bronx in their wish to preserve for all time to come, and especially in the minds of the youth of the region, the memories which cluster round the name of Morris, and particularly attach to Gouverneur Morris.
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December 1844 Shipwreck of the Alabamian with Edward Cooper
[edit]https://www.google.com/search?q=wreck+of+the+Alabamian+-alabama+leghorn
use Leghorn or Livorno
Shipwreck Coordinates
Source: "19 Ocak 1903 Tarihli New York Tribune Gazetesi Sayfa 2" [New York Tribune Newspaper Page of 19 January 1903]. www.gastearsivi.com (in Turkish). Retrieved 2020-11-20.
which
is
"Mr. Hewitt's Peril at Sea; Wreck of Alabmian in 1844 Gave Her Passengers a Narrow Escape". New York Daily Tribune. 19 January 1903. p. 2 col. 3-4. Retrieved 20 November 2020 – via 19 Ocak 1903 Tarihli New York Tribune Gazetesi Sayfa 2 (Turkish for New York Tribune Newspaper Page of 19 January 1903). Fifty years later, July 12, 1894, Mr. Hewitt, Edward Cooper and Captain George B. Raymond celebrated the escape of Mr. Hewitt and Mr. Cooper from death. The Alabamian sailed from Leghorn, was boarded by a Delaware pilot within twenty miles of Cape May. She had been desperately racked by storms, and when another violent storm arose she was unable to resist it, and at dawn on December 12 her captain concluded to abandon her.[...] Location "latitude 36 degrees 40 minutes, longitude 74 degrees [...] in the Gulf Stream" 36°40′N 74°0′W / 36.667°N 74.000°W Captain George B. Raymond commanded the Atalanta, which rescued her crew and passengers.
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12 December
Ship | State | Description |
---|---|---|
Alabamian | United States | On 10 October 1844, the ship sailed from Leghorn for New York. Boarded by a Delaware pilot within twenty miles of Cape May, she had been desperately racked by storms, and on 10 December a gale. Taking on water, the ship was abandoned 36°40′N 74°0′W / 36.667°N 74.000°W with Mate Benson and five men in the ship's surfboat, and Captain Hitchcock and eleven men in the leaking longboat (ten years the ship's pig pen). Atalanta ( United States), bound from Liverpool to New York, rescued all souls. Notable longboat survivors: future New York City mayors and future brothers-in-law Abram S. Hewitt and Edward Cooper.[3][4][5] |
Albanian | United States | The ship sprang a leak and foundered in the Atlantic Ocean. Her crew were rescued.[6] |
Detailed account by Captain George B. Raymond: Atalanta was bound from Liverpool for New York. [2]
Oppermann, R.H (1937). "Selected writings of Abram S. Hewitt:Edited by Allan Nevins, with an introduction by Nicholas Murray Butler. 414 pages, 16 × 24 cms. New York, Columbia University Press, 1937. Price $3.50". FI Journal of the Franklin Institute. 223 (5): 668–669. ISSN 0016-0032. OCLC 4923815017.
Appears under many, varying, catalog entries
"Results for 'Selected Writings of Abram S. Hewitt' [WorldCat.org]". www.worldcat.org. Retrieved 2020-06-06.
Frontier sentinel., December 31, 1844, Page 2, Image 2
"Frontier sentinel. (Ogdensburgh, St. Lawrence County, N.Y.) 1844-1847, December 31, 1844, Image 2" (1844/12/31). 1844-12-31: 2. {{cite journal}}
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“ | In the spring of 1845, Hewitt, along with Peter Cooper’s son, Edward (a close friend with whom he had just survived a shipwreck in the Atlantic in the preceding year), were both on the scene in Trenton overseeing the construction of the rolling mill and its hook-up to the waterpower (Nevins 1935:82-84). | ” |
https://books.google.com/books?id=5ph2CQAAQBAJ&lpg=PT52&ots=XQbnxZV9L7&dq=wreck%20of%20the%20Alabamian%20-alabama%20leghorn&pg=PT52#v=onepage&q=wreck%20of%20the%20Alabamian%20-alabama%20leghorn&f=false
Sailed October 10, 1844 from Leghorn (Livorno), Italy, met first storm November 14, 1844, Shipwreck ?,
Saved December 22, 1844
The Sailor's Magazine, and Naval Journal. American Seamen's Friend Society. 1845. a perfect wreck [...] were all picked up by ship Atalana
Gale Dec. 10, 1844, - Dec. 11, 1844, abandoned Dec. 12 1844, saved Dec. 12, 1844.
Captain Hitchcock, Alabamian. & Captain George B. Raymond of New York, ship Atalanta in Hewitt story from 1886, in Harper's Weekly, with account quoted:
Harper's Weekly. Harper's Magazine Company. 1886. p. 751.
Harper's Weekly. Harper's Magazine Company. 1886. p. 751. {{cite book}}
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Details reception by Cooper and Hewitt families and lasting friendship.
"In ill health", biography:
[edit]"Noted Man Dying". Indianapolis Journal. 1903-01-12. p. 1 col. 2-3. Retrieved 2020-06-06 – via newspapers.library.in.gov.{{cite web}}
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Obituary: New York Tribune (MONDAY, JANUARY 19, 1903.) Page 1:
[edit]- ABRAM S. HEWITT DEAD.
- WHEN MAYOR OF NEW-YORK. THE LAST PHOTOGRAPH. END YESTERDAY AT 6AM
- Conscious Almost to the Last—The Funeral on Wednesday.
- https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/data/batches/dlc_fiji_ver01/data/sn83030214/0017504209A/1903011901/0348.pdf
Erkine Hewitt as decedent of Robert Erskine:
[edit]“ | Other purchases The outstanding purchase of the year was a large-scale manuscript map by Erskine, the first geographer of the Revolutionary Army. One of the annotations upon the back, designating it as "Gen. Greens Map of "Vest Point and Adjacent Country," indicates that "it probably belonged in 1781 to Gen. Nathanael Greene. The map shows the roads, trails, villages, taverns, iron mines, forges, and furnaces in the region from "Newborough" (Newburgh), N. Y., southward to the "Lutheran Church" and "Capt. Board's" in northern New Jersey. Topography is indicated by hachures. The map was "copied from Surveys laid down by Ro. Erskine, F. R. S. 1778-1779." Last year we secured a photostat copy of a strikingly similar map from Erskine Hewitt, of New York City, one of the descendents of Robert Erskine. This indicates that the map was sufficiently useful so that it was duplicated by hand after Erskine's death for the use of the army staff. | ” |
Page 137 of http://www.memory.loc.gov/service/gdc/scd0002/0007/00072432472/00072432472.pdf#page=156
Artifacts of December 1844 Shipwreck in February 1917 Colony Club Exhibition
[edit]Catalogue: Exhibition "Old New York" Relics; Documents and Souvenirs;February 13th to February 18th, 1917. Smithsonian Libraries. New York: Colony Club. 1917. p. 25. Archived from the original on 21 May 2020. {{cite book}}
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- ACCOUNT OF THE SHIPWRECK,
in December of the year 1844, of the "Alabamian," a sailing vessel loaded with marble from Leghorn to New York, on
which Edward Cooper and Abram S. Hewitt were passengers - SPY GLASS, with which Captain Raymond, of the sailing vessel "Atalanta" saw the signal of distress tied to an oar and held up from the small life boat
- NECKERCHIEF, of Abram S. Hewitt, still tied with the rope by which it was attached to the oar, and which Captain Raymond saw as the sun was setting
Hewitt and U.S. Coast Guard
[edit]James G. Blaine, Republican comes to Democrat Hewitt, to pass Coast Guard bill. Hewitt recounts shipwreck in support of bill. Guérin, Polly (2012-11-20). The Cooper-Hewitt Dynasty of New York. Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 978-1-61423-782-2.
1886 departure from U.S. House of Representatives
[edit]"SEATS IN CONGRESS. : SOME OF TO‐MORROW'S CONTESTS : The Interest Excited in Washington by the election—Substitute Clerks to Be Regulated—Undying Affection". Indianapolis News. Indianapolis. 1 November 1886. Retrieved 2020-06-07 – via Hoosier State Chronicles: Indiana's Digital Historic Newspaper Program. The picturesque Hewitt, of New York, will no longer make speeches standing cross-legged in the aisle.
Plum Island
[edit]"New Haven Daily Morning Journal and Courier. [volume] (New Haven [Conn.]) 1848-1894, November 18, 1889, Image 4". 1889-11-18. p. 4 (col. 4). ISSN 2572-6943. Retrieved 2022-08-23.
EX-MAYOR HEWITT BUYS PLUM ISLAND,
Ex-Mayor Abram S. Hewitt of New York has become the possessor of Plum Island, one of the small islands which lie between the Long Island and Connecticut coasts east of Orient. The island was sold under foreclosure on Wednesday last and was bought by
Mr. Hewitt for $15,000. It has fifty or sixty inhabitants.
"The Minneapolis journal. [volume] (Minneapolis, Minn.) 1888-1939, June 27, 1901, Image 3". 1901-06-27. p. 3 (col. 2). ISSN 2151-3953. Retrieved 2022-08-23.
DEFENSES FOR GOTHAM
Works to Be Erected by the Government Without Delay.
New York Sun Special Service
New York, June 27.—With the purchase of 640 additional acres of land from the estate of Abram S. Hewitt of Plum Island, effected by United States District Attorney Pettit, the last step toward the completion of the government reservation at the eastern end of Long Island has been taken. Sixty-four thousand seven hundred dollars was paid for the land. Now that the necessary territory for the government post has been acquired, work will be immediately begun upon the construction of the garrison and defenses. The post on Plum Island, in conjunction with Fort Wright, the post directly opposite on Fisher's Island, at the entrance to Long Island sound, is expected to form the chief link in the chain of defenses to New York city, the second link being just beyond Hell Gate, with Fort Schuyler on the side and the fort at Willett's Point on the other.
Gano Dunn (and family)
[edit]Gano Dunn Bio at IEEE Global History Network [3]
Presidents of the AIEE/IRE/IEEE: The American Institute of Electrical Engineers (AIEE) President 1911-1912: Page 12. IEEE Power Engineering Review, March 1984 Architects of the IEEE
Columbia Tesla Lectures: Assistant Gano Dunn [5] Pages 133-134
Tesla:
“Nature has stored up in the
universe infinite energy. The eternal recipient and transmitter of this energy is the ether…Of all forms of nature’s energy, which ever and ever changing and moving, like a soul animates the inert universe, electricity and magnetism are perhaps the most fascinating…What is electricity, and what is magnetism?”</blockqquote>
First world war: Organizing the sailing of the Principe Di Udine to evacuate Americans from Italy. Gano Dunn served as treasurer, accepting cash or "evidences of credit" for passage. Many of these Americans had been forced to leave France, Spain at the start of the war. While many were wealty, banks had closed leaving ready cash unavailable, with banks refusing to cash American Express Travellers checks.
The committee of guarantors consisting of Messrs Smith Vanderbilt Butler and Dunn not only guaranteed to the American Express Company in Genoa the letters of credit travelers checks and personal checks of those of their fellow passengers who were unknown to the American Express Company but they also assumed the obligation to meet the deficiency which resulted from the difference between the passage money paid by the 399 passengers and the chartered price of the ship In round numbers this deficiency amounted to 40,000 dollars . <a href="https://books.google.com/books?id=iJA2AAAAMAAJ&vq=gayley&dq=mrs.%20gano%20dunn%20gardiner&pg=PA12&ci=178%2C346%2C691%2C312&source=bookclip"><img src="https://books.google.com/books?id=iJA2AAAAMAAJ&pg=PA12&img=1&zoom=3&hl=en&sig=ACfU3U1MvO1aNX6mzYXevTTv9CKYib60-g&ci=178%2C346%2C691%2C312&edge=0"/></a>Among refugees future wife Mrs Gardiner Gayleyand and step-daughter : Miss Florence Gayley
Marriage and residence on Washington Square. [6]
Ex-husband James Gayley [[7]]
GAYLEY SEPARATION TO END IN DIVORCE; Ex-Vice President of the Steel Corporation Admits Suit Is to be Brought. HIS WIFE NOW IN ITALY Action to be Begun in Some Other State on Ground of Incompatability -- Parted a Year Ago.
Yacht Niligara:
The vessel Niliraga is a schooner with after cockpit, a wood hull, 2 masts, a double rig headsail and a Marconi main was designed by Alden Designs #309H, John Gale Alden (1884-1962) built in 1928 by Goudy #038; Stevens at East Boothbay, Maine for Gano Sillick Dunn (1870-1953). The ship is named for "niliraga" in Sanskrit meaning "an affection as unchangeable as the color of indigo".
... In 1928 Gano Sillick Dunn had "Niliraga", an Alden-designed forty-three-foot centerboard schooner, built by Goudy & Stevens in East Boothbay, Maine. The Dunns rented a summer cottage, "Little White Hen" on Sutton Island. After Julia Thurston (Gardiner) Gayley Dunn died in 1937, Gano moved off Sutton Island and summered aboard "Niliraga" using his stepdaughter, Agnes Malcom (Gayley) Gerrish#039;s cottage, "The Haven" in Northeast Harbor, as his land base.. A succession of local men served Mr. Dunn as cooks aboard "Niliraga." ... When Gano Sillick Dunn died in 1953 he left "Niliraga" to Agnes Malcolm (Gayley) Milliken's sister, Florence "Folly" (Gayley) Montgomery, Mrs. Henry Eglinton Montgomery (1889-1975). More interested than her sister, Agnes Milliken managed "Niliraga."
[9] Maine Boats, Homes & Harbors: Issue 120 | June/July 2012 Volume 25 | Number 3 | pp 30- | "Requiem for a Schooner" Slow as cold molasses with idiosyncrasies galore, yet five generations gained mountains of memories that will never be erased. BY ALESSANDRO VITELLI [10] Author's Mother Maria Giulia Senni Vitelli, step grand-daughter of Gano Dunn. Step-daugher was Mary Gayley Senni. [11]
Suit against mother, Amelia Sillick Dunn N. GANO DUNN'S WIFE.; THE HISTORY BROUGHT OUT IN A SUIT ABOUT A TITLE. Judge Ingraham, in the Special Term of the Supreme Court, yesterday, listened to a very graphic description of a period in the life of Gen. N. Gano Dunn, who left this city for Colorado about a year ago. .... Is this eldest son the same Gano Dunn of Cooper Union? Aunt is Mary SilliokVannevar Bush's "Biographical Memoir" glosses over his father with "Dunn's father died before Gano had finished his education" but does list his mother as "Amelia Sillick Dunn". This matches the "Amelia Sillick" name in the NY Times March 30, 1887 article which mentions General N. Gano Dunn deserting his wife and family for Colorado.
CITY COLLEGE GRADUATES; Many Degrees Conferred at the Commencement Exercises Held at Carnegie Hall. MAYOR AND FACULTY CHEERED Gen. Webb and President Hubbell of the Board of Education Led the Trustees to the Platform -- Honor Men Make Addresses. Gano Dunn receives Master of Science. Stephen P. Duggan - other CCNY Master of Science Graduate for 1897
Spouse Marriage: [[12]] [[13]]
Marble Bust of Mrs. Gardiner Gayley Dunn in Metropolitan Museum of Art [[14]]
Julia Gardiner Gayley Artist: Elie Nadelman (American (born Poland), Warsaw 1882–1946 Riverdale, New York) Date: ca. 1918 Medium: Marble Dimensions: 23 x 19 1/2 x 13 in. (58.4 x 49.5 x 33 cm) Classification: Sculpture Credit Line: Gift of Mrs. Francis G. Coleman and Mrs. Charles H. Erhart, Jr., 1980 Accession Number: 1980.368 - See more at: http://www.metmuseum.com/collection/the-collection-online/search/482121#sthash.gxG9bPle.dpuf
Spouse Death: (around 1937-05-13) [[15]] Vannervar Bush GANO SILLICK DUNN 1870—1953 A Biographical Memoir by VANNEVAR BUSH Biographical Memoir COPYRIGHT 1954 NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES WASHINGTON D.C. GANO SILLICK DUNN 1870-1953 BY VANNEVAR BUSH Gano Dunn was born in Yorkville, New York, October 18, 1870, the son of N. Gano Dunn and Amelia Sillick Dunn. His grandfather, Nathaniel Dunn, a school teacher and inventor, who attended Bowdoin College with Longfellow and Hawthorne, probably stimulated the younger Gano's bent for construction and engineering. Dunn's father died before Gano had finished his education; and at the age of fifteen he began to work for the Western Union
Gano Dunn and Edwin S. Burdett photo Foundation Bldg with Hewitt in Background
Gano Dunn Younger Brother Dunn Harris Ashton, banker, of 60 Broadway, New York City, was born, N.Y. City, Feb. 28, 1878; son of Gano and Amelia (Sillick) Dunn; graduated Coll. City of N.Y., B.S., 1897; married, Nov. 29, 1905, Ella Smythe Turner; one son, Harris Ashton, Jr., born Dec. 4, 1906. Treas. Columbia Trust Co., Tanana Valley R.R. Co.; dir. Merchants' Safe Deposit Co. Republican; mem. M. E. Ch. Mem. Delta Kappa Epsilon fraternity, Sons of Revolution.
August 14, 1872 report on Suicide of N. Gano Dunn in Denver after scandal
1917 JP Morgan, R. FULTON CUTTING
1875 Robert Fulton Cutting graduates Columbia University?
1918 Robert Fulton Cutting President, Cooper Union
New York Times (first gradation after R. Fulton Cutting's Death 26 AT COOPER UNION GET SCHOLARSHIPS; 43 Prizes Awarded as 290 Take Diplomas at the School's 76th Co... [PDF]
Cooper Union conferred 290 diplomas, certificates, post-graduate and Bachelor of Science degrees last night at the seventy-sixth annual commencement exercises held in the Great Hall. At the same time, twenty-six scholarships and forty-three prizes for exc...View free preview June 7, 1935 - Article
R. Fulton Cutting dies 1934 NOTABLES MOURN FOR R.F. CUTTING; Funeral of Philanthropist and Financier Held at St. George's Churc... [PDF]
Death...View free preview September 25, 1934 - Obituary
1900 Edward Cooper President of Cooper Union
1880 Regents Annual Report. Peter Cooper President of Cooper Union1908 Cooper Union annual report. [16] John E. Parsons as President [Andrew Carnegie] on Board.
Abram S. Hewitt, Edwin Augustus Stevens, and the Great Eastern
[edit]April, 1867
Abram S. Hewitt traveled aboard the SS Great Eastern when Edwin Augustus Stevens and his family were also travelling to Europe. Stevens had just executed his will, including the bequest for the founding of what would become Stevens Institute of Technology. When the economically challenged Great Eastern was supplied with anthracite coal after the supply of bituminous coal was consumed, Hewitt and Stevens found themselves called upon:
“ There was not a stoker on board who had ever used anthracite coal or indeed had ever seen it. The Captain, Sir James Anderson, came to us and said, "We cannot get along. We have burned up all the coal, and that ⸻ (using a nautical phrase) that stuff we have down there won't burn. Can you tell me what to do?" So Mr. Stevens and I, old as he was and young as I was then, crawled down through many devious passages until we reached the boiler room and there found a very discouraged lot of people, who were trying to burn anthracite coal in the same manner as they would burn bituminous coal. Of course the fire went out, and you will be surprised to learn that he and I, and mostly he, spent nearly two days in the boiler room, teaching the stokers how to burn anthracite coal, which we succeeded in doing and were finally landed at Brest. ” Great Eastern overhauled for European Departure of March 20, 1867: Various (2013-03-28). The Nautical Magazine and Naval Chronicle for 1867. Cambridge University Press. p. 168. ISBN 978-1-108-05489-8.
Edward Cooper
[edit][18] October 8, 1895, Wednesday
Page 10, 259 words
The Cooper Union Labor Bureau was opened yesterday in Room 15, Cooper Union. It is under the management of the New-York Association for the Improvement of the Condition of the Poor, and will supply places for men out of work free of cost. ... Edward Cooper is President.
U.S. Presidents at Cooper Union
[edit]Grant [19] In response to a query about his speaking at the Cooper Institute, he said: "I made up my mind about that many years ago. I never have spoken and I am too old to begin not that I feel so very old, either; but I can't speak, and I certainly shall not dictate anything for any one else to say for me."
[20] Title Grand mass meeting at the Cooper Institute: Nomination of Gen. Ulysses S. Grant to the presidency. : Wednesday, Dec. 4, 1867. : Printed by order of the executive committee Publisher George F. Nesbitt & Co., printers and stationers, cor. Pearl and Pine Streets., 1867 Length 40 pages Note that Peter Cooper was one of the vice presidents of the meeting
ClevelandPRAISED BY THE GERMANS; MR. CLEVELAND GREETED WITH WILD APPLAUSE. HIS FRIENDS FROM "FATHERLAND" THRONG COOPER UNION. A GREAT OUTPOURING OF GERMAN-AMERICANS TO SEE AND HEAR THE DEMOCRATIC CANDIDATE -- THE EX- PRESIDENT'S HAPPY SPEECH ADDS TO HIS POPULARITY -- CARL SCHURZ POINTS OUT THE DANGERS WHICH WOULD FOLLOW REPUBLICAN SUC- CESS -- AN APPEAL TO WHICH ALL GERMAN CITIZENS WILL RESPOND -- OVERFLOW MEETINGS FOR THOUSANDS WHO COULD NOT GET INTO THE HALT.
October 28, 1892, WednesdayPage 1, 3719 words
Ample evidence of Mr. Cleveland's great popularity with the German-Americana of this city was given last night at the mass meeting held under the management of the United German Democracy in the large hall of Cooper Institute [9]
Taft [10]
TAFT DEFENDS BOTH CAPITAL AND LABOR; Tells Cooper Union Audience He's for Union Shops and Mutual Conciliation. NOT HAILED AS PRESIDENT Cordial Greeting at First Grows Warmer After He Answers Volley of Questions. Questions Put to Taft. Negro's Query to Him as Candidate. Against Government Ownership. TAFT DEFENDS BOTH CAPITAL AND LABOR SECRETARY TAFT'S SPEECH. Causes of the Panic. The Labor Unions. Must Recognize Organized Labor. Arbitration. The Legal Right to Strike. Necessity for Considering Abuses. Suppression of These Abuses. Illegality of the Boycott. Remedy of Injunction Preferred. Abuse of Writ of Injunction. Urges Conciliatory Attitude. WANTS VANDERBILT TAX CUT. Agent Sues to Have Assessment for New Dorp Farm Lowered. LONG TERM FOR GIANNONE. Convict's Retraction of Murder Plot Story Doesn't Save Chief Conspirator.
January 11, 1908, Saturday
Page 1, 5376 words
Abram S. Hewitt CLEVELAND'S EULOGY OF ABRAM S. HEWITT; The ex-President's Tribute to the Dead Man's Career. Edward M. Shepard on the Cooper institute Work -- Letter from President Roosevelt.
January 27, 1903, Tuesday
Page 2, 2285 words
Ex-President Grover Cleveland, with tears In his eyes and with his voice so unsteady that at times it became quite indistinct, delivered an eloquent eulogy on the life of Abram S. Hewitt at the City Club last night. From the works of Mr. Hewitt he drew many lessons of which, he said, the people, as custodians of the scheme of free government, should not lose sight
Great Hall
[edit]Jim Lehrer
[edit]Jim Lehrer Memorial Service
Aaron Swartz
[edit]Emmeline Pankhurst
[edit]Emmeline Pankhurst [21]
American Experience S32E12, The Vote, First aired: June 23, 2020, 33 min, one column left of editorial carton SUFFRAGE welcoming LABOR" Unknown publication probably circa December 1, 1909. Visible Text says
"...Pankhurst's Farewell Address.199
Pankhurst at Cooper Union......199,200,201, 202"
Notable Alumni
[edit]First Graduate
[edit]First Graduate, Mrs. Bianca B. Robistscher, née Miss Bianca Bondi. Fun story of an embarrasing start to a commencement ceremony.
Published: May 28, 1909 Copyright © The New York Times
http://query.nytimes.com/mem/archive-free/pdf?res=F10D16FD355512738DDDA10A94DD405B898CF1D3
Richard Sarles
[edit]Richard Sarles, CEO and General Manager of Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority [17]_tag.WT.cg_n = "Julia Karow"; _tag.WT.sa_cat = "Technology"; _tag.WT.sa_author = "Julia Karow"; _tag.WT.sa_pubdate = "December 4, 2000"; QUOTE: quote="If we want to go faster, we must make a major improvement to the electrification system," said Richard Sarles, vice president of high speed rail development in the Northeast corridor at Amtrak.
- ^ Hewitt, Abram S (1965) [First published 1937 by Columbia University Press]. "Liberty, Learning, and Property : Dedication of the New Buildings of Columbia University, Morningside Heights, May 2, 1896" (PDF). In Nevins, Allan (ed.). Selected writings, with Introduction by Nicholas Murray Butler. Port Washington, N.Y.: Kennikat Press. pp. 315–337. OCLC 264897.
the time has come for a new and nobler civilization," ... when ... "the wealth which has accumulated in this city by the joint association of its people, and to which every human being contributes by his industry, shall come to be regarded as a sacred trust to be administered in the public interest for works of beneficence to all.- ^ Hewitt, Abram S (1965) [First published 1937 by Columbia University Press]. "The Meaning of Brooklyn Bridge : SPEECH AT THE OPENING OF BROOKLYN BRIDGE, MAY 24, 1883" (PDF). In Nevins, Allan (ed.). Selected writings, with Introduction by Nicholas Murray Butler. Port Washington, N.Y.: Kennikat Press. pp. 295–311. OCLC 264897.
Man hath indeed wrought far more than strikes the eye in this daring undertaking, by the general judgment of engineers, without a rival among the wonders of human skill. It is not the work of any one man or of any one age. It is the result of the study, of the experience, and of the knowledge of many men in many ages. It is not merely a creation; it is a growth. It stands before us today as the sum and epitome of human knowledge; as the very heir of the ages; as the latest glory of centuries of patient observation, profound study and accumulated skill, gained, step by step, in the never-ending struggle of man to subdue the forces of nature to his control and use. ... Will the bridge lead, as has been forcibly suggested and in some quarters hopefully anticipated, to the further union of the two cities under one name and one government? This suggestion is in part sentimental and in part practical.- ^ a b "Mr. Hewitt's Peril at Sea; Wreck of Alabmian in 1844 Gave Her Passengers a Narrow Escape". New York Daily Tribune. 19 January 1903. p. 2 col. 1-4.
Fifty years later, July 12, 1894, Mr. Hewitt, Edward Cooper and Captain George B. Raymond celebrated the escape of Mr. Hewitt and Mr. Cooper from death. The Alabamian sailed from Leghorn, was boarded by a Delaware pilot within twenty miles of Cape May. She had been desperately racked by storms, and when another violent storm arose she was unable to resist it, and at dawn on December 12 her captain concluded to abandon her. Captain George B. Raymond commanded the Atalanta, which rescued her crew and passengers.{{cite news}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link)- ^ Cite error: The named reference
REPLACE_THIS
was invoked but never defined (see the help page).- ^ a b PUBLIC DOCUMENTS PRINTED BY ORDER OF SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES, DURING THE FIRST SESSION OF THE TWENTY-SIXTH CONGRESS, BEGUN AND HELD AT THE CITY OF WASHINGTON, DECEMBER 2, 1839. 1840. p. 11 Sec. 155.
- ^ Cite error: The named reference
MC311244
was invoked but never defined (see the help page).- ^ The New World. J. Winchester. 1844.
- ^ Guérin, Polly (2012-11-20). The Cooper-Hewitt Dynasty of New York. Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 978-1-61423-782-2.
- ^ "PRAISED BY THE GERMANS; MR. CLEVELAND GREETED WITH WILD APPLAUSE. HIS FRIENDS FROM "FATHERLAND" THRONG COOPER UNION. A GREAT OUTPOURING OF GERMAN-AMERICANS TO SEE AND HEAR THE DEMOCRATIC CANDIDATE -- THE EX-PRESIDENT'S HAPPY SPEECH ADDS TO HIS POPULARITY -- CARL SCHURZ POINTS OUT THE DANGERS WHICH WOULD FOLLOW REPUBLICAN SUCCESS -- AN APPEAL TO WHICH ALL GERMAN CITIZENS WILL RESPOND -- OVERFLOW MEETINGS FOR THOUSANDS WHO COULD NOT GET INTO THE HALL" (PDF). New York Times. 1892-10-28. p. 1. Retrieved 2010-06-24.
It might be claiming too much to say that the Democratic Party as such gives a sufficient guarantee for the improvement of political methods or avoidance of these wrongdoings.- ^ "TAFT DEFENDS BOTH CAPITAL AND LABOR; Tells Cooper Union Audience He's for Union Shops and Mutual Conciliation. NOT HAILED AS PRESIDENT Cordial Greeting at First Grows Warmer After He Answers Volley of Questions" (PDF). New York Times. January 11, 1908. p. 1. Retrieved 2010-06-24.
Give the Government the ownership of mines and railroads and like enterprises, and I tremble to think of the danger to the Republic.- ^ Wilson, Woodrow (1913). The New Freedom: A call for the emancipation of the generous energies of a people. New York: Doubleday, Page & Company. pp. 98–99. Retrieved 2010-06-21.
One of the valuable lessons of my life was due to the fact that at a comparatively early age in my experience as a public speaker I had the privilege of speaking in Cooper Union in New York.- ^ "WILSON SAYS ELASTICITY SAVES THE CONSTITUTION; Made to Help, Not to Hinder, Asserts Princeton's President" (PDF). New York Times. 1904-11-20. p. 5. Retrieved 2010-06-21.
The Constitution was not made to fit us like a straitjacket.{{cite news}}
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(help)- ^ "THREE BIG MEETINGS HERE; President Says Some in Campaign Have Tried to Discredit Government. EFFORT TO DIVIDE CLASSES Tells 15,000 in Madison Square Garden the Country Stands at a Serious Turning Point. PREDICTS HIS RE-ELECTION. President and Mrs. Wilson Scale Fire Escape to Get Into Garden" (PDF). New York Times. 1916-11-3. p. 1. Retrieved 2010-06-21.
COOPER UNION PACKED; Enthusiastic Throng Cheers the President for Five Minutes{{cite news}}
: Check date values in:|date=
(help)- ^ "ROOSEVELT BITTERLY ATTACKS WILSON; Tells Cooper Union Audience the President Cares Nothing for the Nation's Soul" (PDF). New York Times. 1916-11-04. p. 4. Retrieved 2010-06-21.
I have not said one thing of him which I did not deem it necessary to say because of the vital interests of this Republic.- ^ Roosevelt, Theodore (1917). Americanism and preparedness: Speeches of Theodore Roosevelt, July to November, 1916. New York: The Mail and express job print. pp. 134–145. Retrieved 2010-06-21.
There can be no greater misfortune for a free nation than to find itself under incapable leadership when confronted by a great crisis.- ^ . New York Times. January 27, 1903. p. 2 http://query.nytimes.com/mem/archive-free/pdf?res=9B0CE4D61030E733A25754C2A9679C946297D6CF. Retrieved 2010-06-24.
Ex-President Grover Cleveland, with tears In his eyes and with his voice so unsteady that at times it became quite indistinct, delivered an eloquent eulogy on the life of Abram S. Hewitt at the City Club last night.{{cite news}}
: Missing or empty|title=
(help)- ^ Ann Scott Tyson (28 January 2011). "Metro system names leaders". The Washington Post. p. B01. Retrieved 5 February 2011.
{{cite news}}
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ignored (help)- ^ Ken Archer; Erik Weber (3 February 2011). "Sarles talks safety, escalators, bag searches, funding & more". Greater Greater Washington.
- ^ Sarles, Metro board members sworn in. The Washington Post. 01/27/2011. Retrieved 2011-02-05.
{{cite AV media}}
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(help)- ^ Ashley Halsey III; Ann Scott Tyson; Anita Kumar; Nikita Stewart; Martin Weil (2011-01-22). "Sarles to remain at helm of Metro". The Washington Post. Retrieved 2011-01-25.
- ^ "Richard Sarles is Metro's new CEO and GM" (Press release). Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority. 2011-01-21. Retrieved 2011-01-25.
The Metro Board of Directors has agreed upon Richard Sarles as Metro's new Chief Executive Officer and General Manager{{cite press release}}
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(help)- ^ John Hall (6 May 2007). "Transit Chief's To-Do List: No. 1, New Hudson Tunnel". New York Times.
We want public transit to be the preferred choice for the commuters. We don't want to force them out of their automobiles; we want to attract them out of their automobiles.- ^ Julia Karow (4 December 2000). "Almost on Time: High-Speed Trains in the U.S." Scientific American. Retrieved 5 February 2011.
If we want to go faster, we must make a major improvement to the electrification system{{cite news}}
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_tag.WT.cg_n = "Julia Karow"; _tag.WT.sa_cat = "Technology"; _tag.WT.sa_author = "Julia Karow"; _tag.WT.sa_pubdate = "December 4, 2000"; QUOTE: quote="If we want to go faster, we must make a major improvement to the electrification system," said Richard Sarles, vice president of high speed rail development in the Northeast corridor at Amtrak.
Images
[edit]41 Cooper Square
Is the typeface an homage to Roni Horn's work? http://greg.org/archive/2009/11/20/the_roni_horn_memorial_signage_system.html
the article doesn't seem to mention the influence in Abbot Miller's work: http://pentagram.com/en/new/2009/11/new-work-the-cooper-union.php
And here it is engraved in stone :-) http://pentagram.com/en/cooperUnion_32_pop.php
Sungard Cajana Ellucian
[edit]Friday February 18, 2011, SunGard Higher Education filed suit in an Ohio court. http://www.educause.edu/About+EDUCAUSE/CorporatePressReleaseService/DatatelandSunGardHigherEducati/246471
http://ovum.com/2012/03/29/the-best-of-times-and-the-worst-of-times-in-higher-education-it/
http://dockets.justia.com/docket/ohio/ohsdce/2:2011cv00148/144474/
http://www.phillytechnews.net/2011/04/sungard-higher-education-sues-hosting.html
http://press.emerson.edu/itbits/2012/03/28/sungard-sghe-and-datatel-annouces-new-name/
http://greyceiling.wordpress.com/tag/ellucian/
http://blogs.cpcc.edu/ais/category/colleagueerp-system/
http://www.newkerala.com/news/2011/worldnews-179213.html
http://trademark.markify.com/trademarks/uspto/ellucian/85569168
John M. Conroy
[edit]http://pilotmag.com/guppy Back of napkin design, like ethernet :-)
http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Back_of_a_napkin&direction=prev&oldid=231920962
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Back-of-the-envelope_calculation
Stephen P. Duggan
[edit]Stephen P. Duggan Add link to son and family papers at Marist College [22]
Ellucian
[edit]March 26, 2012 the merged Datatel and Sungard Higher Education (formerly known as Datatel+SGHE)
http://news.datatel.com/news/ellucian+new+company+name+announced+for+datatel+and+sungard+higher+education+combination.htm http://www.sungardhe.com/news.aspx?id=3302
- Michelle Reed, chief marketing officer, said in a statement that "Ellucian evokes the clarity and light that learning brings to life, aspects that we aspire to share in our relationships with institutions of higher, further and vocational education around the world."
Trademarks applied for on 3/14/2012: http://tess2.uspto.gov/bin/showfield?f=doc&state=4004:k3glf5.3.1
http://tess2.uspto.gov/bin/showfield?f=doc&state=4004:k3glf5.3.2
http://tess2.uspto.gov/bin/showfield?f=doc&state=4004:k3glf5.3.3
http://tess2.uspto.gov/bin/showfield?f=doc&state=4004:k3glf5.3.4
Limited partnership filed by Attorneys Mindy Lok and Samantha Himelman of Simpson Thacher & Bartlett LLP http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1209_North_Orange_Street
Corporate lineage
http://www.alacrastore.com/mergers-acquisitions/Datatel_Inc-2522500
Stable sorting tables to use as demos to transclude
[edit]Hunting for Tables for demonstrating Stable Sorting
Only matches 10 pages autocollapsed page
Better hunt Searched via this searchHunting via Original too broad search
- List_of_map_projections#Table_of_projections too long for Transclusion
- Historical_rankings_of_presidents_of_the_United_States#Scholar_survey_results too complicated
Static Stable sorting tables with dividers
[edit]
Unsorted table→Sorted by State Code→ Stable Sort by State, then City Row City State CodeOld
→
New
RowCity State CodeOriginal
→
Initial Sorting
→
Following
stable sortCity State Code1 Chicago IL 13 → 1 Rockford IA 13 → 1 → 1 Rockford IA 2 Rockford IL 2 → 2 Rockford IL 4 → 5 → 2 Champaign IL 3 Evanston IL 3 → 3 Evanston IL 1 → 4 → 3 Chicago IL 4 Champaign IL 1 → 4 Chicago IL 3 → 3 → 4 Evanston IL 5 Detroit MI 4 → 5 Champaign IL 2 → 2 → 5 Rockford IL 6 New York NY 12 → 6 Rockford MI 5 → 7 → 6 Detroit MI 7 Buffalo NY 5 → 7 Detroit MI 12 → 6 → 7 Rockford MI 8 Milwaukee WI 15 → 8 Rockford MN 15 → 8 → 8 Rockford MN 9 Albany NY 11 → 9 Syracuse NY 9 → 12 → 9 Albany NY 10 Green Bay WI 6 → 10 New York NY 7 → 11 → 10 Buffalo NY 11 Syracuse NY 7 → 11 Buffalo NY 6 → 10 → 11 New York NY 12 Rockford MI 9 → 12 Albany NY 11 → 9 → 12 Syracuse NY 13 Rockford IA 14 → 13 Rockford TN 14 → 13 → 13 Rockford TN 14 Rockford TN 8 → 14 Milwaukee WI 10 → 15 → 14 Green Bay WI 15 Rockford MN 10 → 15 Green Bay WI 8 → 14 → 15 Milwaukee WI
Static Stable sorting tables
[edit]
Unsorted table→Sorted by State Code→ Stable Sort by State, then City Row City StateOld
vs.
New
RowCity StateOriginal
vs.
Sort
then
Another
stable sortCity State1 Chicago IL 13 → 1 Rockford IA 13 → 1 → 1 Rockford IA 2 Rockford IL 2 → 2 Rockford IL 4 → 5 → 2 Champaign IL 3 Evanston IL 3 → 3 Evanston IL 1 → 4 → 3 Chicago IL 4 Champaign IL 1 → 4 Chicago IL 3 → 3 → 4 Evanston IL 5 Detroit MI 4 → 5 Champaign IL 2 → 2 → 5 Rockford IL 6 New York NY 12 → 6 Rockford MI 5 → 7 → 6 Detroit MI 7 Buffalo NY 5 → 7 Detroit MI 12 → 6 → 7 Rockford MI 8 Milwaukee WI 15 → 8 Rockford MN 15 → 8 → 8 Rockford MN 9 Albany NY 11 → 9 Syracuse NY 9 → 12 → 9 Albany NY 10 Green Bay WI 6 → 10 New York NY 7 → 11 → 10 Buffalo NY 11 Syracuse NY 7 → 11 Buffalo NY 6 → 10 → 11 New York NY 12 Rockford MI 9 → 12 Albany NY 11 → 9 → 12 Syracuse NY 13 Rockford IA 14 → 13 Rockford TN 14 → 13 → 13 Rockford TN 14 Rockford TN 8 → 14 Milwaukee WI 10 → 15 → 14 Green Bay WI 15 Rockford MN 10 → 15 Green Bay WI 8 → 14 → 15 Milwaukee WI Random and Sandbox
[edit]1903 Man dies while driving train
[edit]"HAND OF CORPSE AT THROTTLE. Engineer Killed at His Post, but the Train Ran On". Indianapolis Journal. Vol. Volume 53, no. 12. Indianapolis. 12 January 1903. p. 1 col. 6. Retrieved 2020-06-06 – via Hoosier State Chronicles: Indiana's Digital Historic Newspaper Program.
Passengers on an Incoming Knoxville & Ohio River Railroad train rode several miles this afternoon with the hand of a corpse at the throttle of the engine. The train left Buckeye, Tenn., on time and ran through to Careyvllle, the next station. When Engineer A. C. Young ran through the latter town Fireman Matlock knew something was wrong and stepped to the engineer's side of the engine. He found Young dead and immediately stopped the train. There is a wound on the left side of the engineer's head, and the supposition is that a piece of rock fell from the side of a high cut through the mountains and killed him instantly. The train ran perhaps eight miles after Young was killed.{{cite news}}
:|volume=
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(help)Taft and Philippines
[edit]"WANT TAFT TO REMAIN : Popular Demonstration by residents of Manila". Indianapolis Journal. Volume 53 (12). Indianapolis: 1 col. 2. 1903-01-12. Retrieved 2020-06-06.
The general regret of the Filipino people at the possible departure of Governor Taft resulted to-day in a popular demonstration for the purpose of urging the Governor to remain in the islands.. The streets of Manila have been placarded with signs saying, "We want Governor Taft," in English, Tagalo and Spanish. A crowd of 8,000 men marched to Malacanan Palace, the Governor's residence, today. Upon reaching the palace speeches were made by representatives of the Federal, Liberal and National parties, in which the Governor was urged to remain. The speakers said Mr. Taft's presence was necessary to preserve order, for the prevention of political disruption and to insure the maintenance of the present policy. The speakers paid personal tributes to the Governor, the crowd cheering its approval. In replying to the addresses Governor Taft said it would not be decided at present whether he would leave the islands or remain until next August.{{cite journal}}
:|volume=
has extra text (help); Cite has empty unknown parameter:|1=
(help)
References Practice
[edit]Bold text