Word: due
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...enthusiasm then aroused and to the courage and foresight of Captains Goodrich, Perkins and Higginson, in changing the old system of lass races and preparation for the University crew is larpely due the present increased general interest and skill. The new boathouse given by the New York graduates has now been in use one year, and has contributed very greatly to the pleasure and attractiveness of rowing for many...
...James Bradstreet Greenough was born at Portland, Maine, May 4, 1833, and died at Cambridge, October 11, 1901. After studying at the Boston Latin School and with a private tutor, he entered Harvard College in 1852, and graduated in due course with the Class of 1856. He became a member of the College Faculty in 1865, as Tutor in Latin; was made Assistant Professor in 1873, and was Professor of Latin from 1883 until his retirement, in consequence of failing health, at the end of the last academic year. He was a member of the Administrative Board of the Graduate...
...warmly interested in the establishment of the Harvard Studies in Classical Philology, and the success of the efforts to secure an adequate financial basis for this publication was entirely due to him. He laid the project before his classmates, and by his enthusiasm roused their interest to such a pitch that they determined to make it a class affair, with the result that the whole of the amount required came to the University as the gift of the Class of 1856. He also served for several years on the editorial committee of the Studies and was a frequent contributor...
...suggest that officers of instruction and administration of Harvard should have the same privilege in the allotment of tickets as the members of the University; better still that a special section, selected with fairness and due regard to underlying principles, be assigned to them. GRADUATE
...evening at the Harvard Observatory of which eighty-three were Leonids. The shower did not commence until after 12 and was at its height between 2 and 3 o'clock. From the reports of Pacific coast observatories it appears that the main shower was visible only in the west, due to the fact that the earlier daylight in the east made the Leonids invisible during the larger showers...