INDEX 



589 



Charles Kendall Adams, i. 438, 440; 

 Jacob Gould Schunnan, i. 440 

 Professorships, resident and non-resi 

 dent, i. 337, 339 ; value of, i. 354, 355, 358 

 Relation of students to classical pro 

 fessors, i. 362 



Relation to the State school system,!. 331 

 Religious matters, Sage Chapel, i. 402 ; 

 an unsectarian pulpit, i. 403-405; 

 Young Men s Christian Association, i. 

 406 ; Barnes Hall, i. 406-408 

 Scholarships, i. 331; fellowships and 

 gratuitous instruction, i. 391-395, 415 ; 

 elections to, i. 436 

 Student labor, i. 344 



Trustees, first meeting of, i. 305 ; charter 

 conditions, i. 342, 427 ; undergraduates 

 as, i. 431 ; powers and responsibilities 

 Of, i. 435, 436 



Corsica, W. s visit to, ii. 212 

 Corson, Hiram, professor at Cornell, i. 



364, 428, 429 



Cortland Academy, founding of, i. 5 ; in 

 fluence of, on W. s life, i. 6 

 Corwin, Thomas, his power over an audi 

 ence, i. 221; his humorous speech in 

 Congress discrediting Isaac M. Crary, 

 i. 50 



Coudert, F. R., a member of the Vene 

 zuela Commission, ii. 119 

 Coxe, Arthur Cleveland, lecturer at Cor 

 nell, i. 364 

 Crandall, Prudence, portrait of, presented 



to Cornell University, i. 163, 164 

 Cranworth, Lord, story concerning, ii. 392 

 Crary, Isaac M., his attack on General 



Harrison s military reputation, i. 50 

 Crawford, Marion, W. s acquaintance with, 



ii. 417 

 Creation, mediaeval idea of, in mosaics, ii. 



450, 456 

 Credit Mobilier, Garfleld s connection 



with, i. 186 

 Creighton, Bishop, W. s acquaintance 



with, ii. 404 



Crimean War, i. 448 ; observations in St. 

 Petersburg, i. 450, 464 ; American adven 

 turers in Russia, i. 456 ; loss of Sebasto- 

 pol, i. 465 ; blockading fleet at the mouth 

 of the Neva, i. 466 

 Criminal justice as administered in Great 



Britain, ii, 226 

 Criminal law, history of W. s study of, ii. 



495, 503 

 Crozier, William, delegate to The Hague 



Peace Conference, ii. 251, 337 

 Curtis, George William, lecturer in New 

 Haven, i. 29 ; at National Convention of 

 1864, i. 119 ; of 1884, i. 202, 203 ; his sym 

 pathy with W. s university ideal, i. 292; 

 his lectures at Cornell, i. 317, 355, 364; 

 his address on the opening day, i. 343 

 Curtius, Ernst, Greek scholar and histo 

 rian, i. 557 



Custine, Marquis de, story concerning, i. 

 475 



Dana, Charles A., his impression of Pobe- 

 donostzeff, ii. 63 



Dana, James Dwight, lecturer at Yale, i. 

 29 



D Aubigne s &quot;History of the Reforma 

 tion&quot; led to W. s devoting himself to 

 the study and teaching of history, i. 21 



Davidoff, Orloff, &quot;the funniest thing he 

 saw in America,&quot; ii. 44 



Davies, Thomas Frederick, Bishop of 

 Michigan, W. s &quot;chum,&quot; i. 30, 68 



Davis, Jefferson, his flight at the sur 

 render of Richmond, i. 155; names on 

 his bail bond, i. 159 



DeLancey, William Heathcote, bishop, 



his impressiveness, ii. 624 

 Delaunay, Count, Italian ambassador at 



Berliu, i. 547 



Delyanoff, the &quot;Minister of Public En 

 lightenment,&quot; Russia, ii. 41 

 Demetrieff, his account of the murder of 

 Peter III, ii. 44 



Depew, Chauncey M., at the State Con 

 vention of 1871, i. 165 



Desmoulins, Camilla, unveiling of statue 

 of, ii. 442 



Dew, William, historical lecturer, i. 255 



Diaz, Porfirio, W. s presentation to, i. 235, 

 ii. 447 



Dickinson, &quot; Bray,&quot; story regarding, i. 58. 



Dickson, Andrew (grandfather), birth 

 place, i. 4 ; a founder of Cortland Acad 

 emy, i. 5 ; a Democrat, i. 45 



Dinner of the Lord Mayor of London at 

 Guildhall, i. 531 



Diplomas, sham, selling of, in Germany, 

 i. 541 



Diplomatic service of the United States, 

 condition before the Civil War, ii. 356; 

 since the war, ii. 357 ; President Cleve 

 land s effort, ii. 357 ; faults of the pres 

 ent service, ii. 358; advice to young 

 men, ii. 358 ; suggested improvements in 

 the appointment of ambassadors, ii. 358 ; 

 ministers, ii. 359; secretaries, ii. 359; ex 

 pert attaches, ii. 361 ; probable good re 

 sults, ii. 362; promotion for merit, ii. 

 363; retention of men, ii. 364; proper 

 houses or apartments for representa 

 tives abroad, ii. 18-21, 50, 142, 182, 364- 

 367 ; increase of salaries, ii. 368 ; relation 

 of the service to the university, ii. 369 ; 

 the question of a diplomatic uniform, ii. 

 370; W. s report, as commissioner at the 

 Paris Exposition of 1878, bearing on the 

 preparation of young men for the diplo 

 matic service, i. 378, ii. 492 



Disraeli, see Beaconsfield, Lord 



Donnelly, Ignatius, W. s meeting with, and 

 his speech in the Minnesota legislature, 

 i. 239-241 



Douglas, Stephen Arnold, i. 85 ; eloquence 

 of, i. 65, 66i 



Douglass, Frederick, and the anti-slavery 

 party, i. 16 ; secretary of the Santo Do 

 mingo Commission, i. 501 ; refusal of 

 dinner to, on the Potomac steamer, i. 

 504 



Dour no vo, Russian minister of the inte 

 rior, W. s experience with, ii. 36 



Dred Scott decision and Chief Justice 

 Taney, i. 77 



Drink problem in America and abroad, i. 

 516-521, ii. 451 



Drouyn de Lhuys, Edouard, his interest 

 in the Reform School at Mettray, i. 522 



Droysen, Johann Gustav, his opinion of 

 Lanfrey s &quot;Histoire de Napole on,&quot; i 



558 



Drunkenness, a defense of, by Senator 

 McDougal, i. 158 



Du Bois-Reymond, Emil, on the results of 

 the expulsion of the Huguenots from 

 France, i. 559 



Dufferin, Lord, dines with Bismarck, i. 

 579 



Dumas, Alexandre, the elder, his appear 

 ance and his vanity, i. 568 



Duruy, Jean Victor, his prophecy concern 

 ing the church and state in France, i. 624 



Dwight, Theodore, a lecturer at Cornell, 

 i. 356, 383 



Earthquake at Florence, W. s experience 

 in, ii. 467 



