Word: england
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...accordance with an arrangement perfected two years ago between the University and the New England Conservatory of Music, the latter wishes to announce that a course in Plainsong. Accompaniment will be formed for the second half-year, beginning on Thursday, under the instruction of Mr. Wallace Goodrich. All Harvard students in the Department of Music, and others by special arrangement, who wish to take this course, should consult of once with Mr. W. C. Heilman, 1 Arsenal square, Cambridge...
...references to the passing crowds of trippers and the sights and sounds of a seaside resort seems forced and mechanical. Mr. Schenck's "Psychical Research" is rather well told, but the conclusion is obxions almost from the start. "The Conciliator," by H. Edgell, a fish story in New England dialect, and "McVane's Retirement." by R. E. Andrews, the story of a railroad wreck, are decidedly conventional both in style and plot. Mr. Wheclock's poem. "A Work of Art," is a dignified bit of verse, characterized, like all his work, by serious purpose and marked excellence of form...
...Prothero, the well-known authority on English constitutional history, will be unable to come to America this year, History 9b, the course for the second half-year on the constitutional history of England from the Great Charter to the sixteenth century, announced to be given by him, will be conducted by Professors C. H. Haskins and S. M. Macvane and Dr. R. B. Merriman...
Official information has been received that the recent action of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences recommending a reduction in the number of Intercollegiate athletic contests, was taken in response to the following communication from the Association of Colleges in New England...
...annual meeting of the Association of Colleges in New England at Cambridge, December 6, 1907, voted, to send to the various colleges represented in the association the following expression of opinion: That an exaggerated amount of attention is now being given to intercollegiate athletic contests in most of the New England colleges, and that to diminish this exaggeration the most effective measure would be a large reduction in the number of intercollegiate contests...