Word: berlin
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...return the University has sent Professor W. A. Neilson to Paris for the entire year, and Professor A. B. Hart will go to the University of Berlin in February. Professor L. J. Henderson has been named as Harvard representative at the Western colleges, and will spend the year lecturing at Beloit, Grinnell, Ames and Colorado...
...given an accepted standard which is enforced, sports at once are braced up. For this reason then there will be public interest in the announcement that the committee, sitting at Lyons, France, has just come to an agreement, not differing much from that submitted to the federation congress in Berlin last year, but expressing the mature judgement of men representing six of the nations most given to sporting contests...
This composition was written at Eisenstadt in 1761 while Haydn was Kapellmeister under the patronage of the Prince of Esterhazy. It is the oldest autograph score by the composer in existence and lay hidden for many years after its conception. It was revived a few years ago by the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra under Nikisch...
Owing to Professor Hart's absence in Berlin during the second half of next year, History 13 will be given next year as a half-course during the first half-year and will cover the History of the United States from 1801 to 1850. This half-course will be followed in the second half-year at the same hour by a now half-course, History 32b, covering the general History of the United States from 1850 to the present time. This half-course will be given by Professor F. J. Turner. Professor Turner's course, History 17, the History...
...March Illustrated we learn that the ambition of the present board is "first of all to interest undergraduates and thereby to educate and mould opinion." It is a pleasure to find how near the present number comes to meeting the test so laid down. Mr. Gannet's "Impressions of Berlin University" give us an unusually intimate picture of German student life. His observations are pointed and keen; indeed, such ones as, "The German is perpetually hungry," and, "Akademische Freiheit is the Veritas of the German University," are almost epigrammatic. There is also novelty in Mr. Lockwood's chronicle...