Word: england
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...Dickinson, M.A., of King's College, Cambridge, England, who delivered the annual Ingersoll lecture on "The Immortality of Man" last Friday evening, will give the first of a series of three lectures on "Ideals of Democracy" in the Lecture Room of the Fogg Museum this evening at 8 o'clock...
...Dickinson, M.A., of King's College, Cambridge, England, delivered the Ingersoll lecture for this year last night on "The Immortality of Man." President Eliot introduced the speaker...
...Ingersoll lecture for this year will be given in the Lecture Room of the Fogg Museum this evening at 8 o'clock by Mr. G. L. Dickinson, M.A., of King's College, Cambridge, England. The subject of the lecture will be "The Immortality of Man." It will be open to the public...
...Edward Porritt, who is this year conducting History 12b, gave an interesting talk on "Provincial England" yesterday afternoon in Emerson J. The object of the lecture was to enable men who intend to go to England to visit with appreciation the points which are of interest from a social and economic point of view...
...great population of provincial England is distributed very unevenly; the industrial centres, like Lancastershire, Yorkshire and Durham, are congested, while the rural districts are only thinly populated. The reason for this is that the more progressive of the rural population have abandoned farming and settled in the manufacturing towns. Although the people of these agricultural districts have advanced in learning, the physical appearance of the country is practically the same as in the eighteenth century. One of the most interesting parts of rural England is the Isle of Oxholme in Lincolnshire, which is the only part of the country where...