Word: children
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...LECTURE. "Nervous Disorders of Children." Dr. William N. Bullard. Medical School, Longwood avenue, Boston...
...after the beginning of the second half-year, to Freshmen who are deserving and in need of assistance. These two scholarships are the Scholarship of the Class of 1867, and the Mary L. Whitney Scholarship. In awarding the Scholarship of the Class of 1867, preference will be given to children or grandchildren of members of the class. This scholarship has an income of $175, and the Mary L. Whitney Scholarship an income...
...celebrate" and "move along," and the ornateness of "snow-jacinth" or the elegance of "wain." It might be said further that a "purple vale" cannot be situated exactly "amid the clouds"; that "carolling and song" are one and the same thing; and that "the hills are gold--for children's voices hall" is a non-sequitur, in spite of the dash. On the whole, however, this piece of verse strikes me as the best of the three minor pieces; for Mr. J. H. Wheelock, in "Autumn by the Sea," lets deep call unto deep indeed, but with an unperspicuous symbolization...
Look on thy struggling children's faces...
...indebted for our knowledge of John Harvard's parentage mainly to Mr. Henry Watters. Thomas Rogers, father of Katherine, John Harvard's mother, a well-to-do marketman, and later alderman and may or, brought up his children side by side with the Shakespeare children of Stratford-on-Avon, where both families lived. In one of Thomas Rogers' numerous trips to London, he prob- ably met Robert Harvard, the father of John Harvard, also a marketman. In 1605 Robert Harvard, of Southwark, married Katherine Rogers, and in November, 1607, occurred John Harvard's birth. As a child he must have...