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Geological Conference. Papers: Preliminary Report on the South-western Margin of the Boston Basin, Mr. A. J. Collier; Preliminary Report on Shore Erosion on Drumlins, Mr. G. C. Curtis; Preliminary Report on Boulder Trains near Arligton, Mr. H. H. Keeler; A Standard Set of Cloud Views (illustrated by stereopticon), Mr. R. D. C. Ward. Geological Laboratory...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: University Calendar. | 5/19/1894 | See Source »

...returned to Cambridge Sunday afternoon from his western trip. He left about the first of March and went first to Lawrenceville, N. J., where he visited the great preparatory school there. Next he visited Bryn Mawr College, Washington University, of St. Louis, Denver, and the University of Colorado at Boulder. Leaving Colorado he went directly to California. He spent about two weeks in San Francisco and around San Francisco Bay. Thence he went to Southern California, visiting Los Angeles, San Diego, Riverside, Redlands, and San Bernadino. At San Bernadino he saw the superintendent of schools, Alex. E. Fry, whose writings...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: President Eliot's Trip. | 5/10/1892 | See Source »

...memorial bust has been subscribed for by an hundred alumni of the college who were former pupils of Dr. Guyot, and who erect this tablet in appreciation of his thirty years of faithful labor at Princeton. The tablet itself will be three-fourths Roman bust, set in an erratic boulder which has been secured from the Mt. Blanc chain of the Alps. It was in the study of the formation and character of these boulders that Prof. Guyot made his most important contribution to science. The unveiling exercises will take place on Tuesday, June 10, when the bust will...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Guyot Memorial Tablet. | 5/17/1890 | See Source »

...river. But notwithstanding everything said about it, it really doesn't stop a boat very much, the main inconvenience being the difficulty one has in rowing his oar. About three-eighths of a mile from the start, on the west side of the river, there is a large, prominent boulder, stretching out from the shore, which is familiarly known as "Rock." The crews are always timed from the start up to this point, and it has become almost as important as any one of the half-mile flags...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: New London-The Harvard Quarters and the Course. | 6/23/1886 | See Source »

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