Word: afternoons
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...decided yesterday afternoon by the Senior button committee that designs should be obtained from several manufacturers for the class buttons. A simple device in blue and white, the class colors, probably containing the numeral "10" will be chosen very soon. The buttons, which are expected to cost about 25 cents each, will be put on sale shortly after the Christmas recess at Leavitt & Peirce's and at the Co-operative...
...final dedication ceremonies of the new building of the Harvard Dental-School on Longwood avenue, Boston, will be held today in the new building, at Sanders Theatre, and the Hotel Somerset. Yesterday the building was open for public inspection from 9 to 1 o'clock. In the afternoon the Officers of Instruction and Government of Harvard College received a number of invited guests at tea and in the evening the same committee held a reception to all men registered in the University...
...Edgar H. Wells '97, Secretary for Appointments, and general secretary of the Alumni Association, left Cambridge last night for new York, whence he will sail this afternoon on board the "Adriatic" for Europe. Stopping for a short time in London, he will continue by boat to Cairo, Egypt, and from there will journey for some distance up the Nile valley. On the return trip he will stop in Paris, and probably will spend several days further in London. The trip is intended primarily as a vacation for Mr. Wells. He is expected to return to the University about the last...
James MacKaye '95 will give the second of a series of important lectures on "Political Engineering" this afternoon at 4.30 o'clock. The lecture was originally announced to take place in Emerson F, but if it is as largely attended as the first of the series it will be held in Emerson D. The special subject that Mr. MacKaye will speak upon in this lecture is "The Happiness of Nations." The lecture will be open to the public...
James M. MacKaye '95, spoke on "The True criterion of Right" in the first of his series of five lectures on "Political Engineering" yesterday afternoon. He explained that in the field of industry and mechanics, our civilization is in keeping with our idea of the twentieth century, because scientific methods of Investigation have been applied. In the field of ethics, however, our civilization is distinctly mediaeval, inasmuch as our moral codes are based upon personal Intuition and not upon scientific research. Mr. MacKaye believes that if scientific principles are applied to our code of morals, it will be as easy...