Word: equality
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1900-1909
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Upper-classmen and Freshmen in about equal numbers filled the Living Room of the Union last evening at the annual Faculty reception to new students. Dean L. B. R. Briggs '75 presided and the speakers in order were Professor A. L. Lowell '77, Professor G. H. Palmer '64, L. K. Lunt '09, and President Eliot...
...women, and a student may take one or more. But no person will be allowed to attend a course unless qualified to profit by it; and for that purpose, if under twenty years of age, they must have graduated from a high school or an institution of equal grade; and if over twenty, must have so graduated, or show in some way a sufficient degree of education. For this purpose applicants who have not already taken a collegiate course at the Lowell Institute will be required to fill out blanks stating their name, age, schooling, the kind and extent...
...purpose and status of the Union is intended especially for new students. The Union was founded in 1899 by Major Henry Lee Higginson h.'55, and was intended by him to be "a house open to all Harvard men without restriction and in which they all stand equal." It has proved to be not only this but a meeting place for individuals, for organizations of many kinds, for mass meetings and class smokers, an eating-place which alone in Cambridge supplies the need of first-class restaurant fare and adequate provision for University training-tables, a reader's resort with...
...time, except for one stretch. The shell did not appear to go as badly as might be expected, and it is hoped that within a few days the crew will be rowing well together again. Of course Cutler is considerably lighter than Fish and is not his equal in either strength or endurance...
...survey of the North Italian Painters extends from Altichiero to Correggio, with a postscript on the Electics and the Teneloists. He analyzes with equal patience and skill the works of scores of lesser men. He seems to have overlooked nothing. And he brings all, down to the most modest specimen, into his system. Of chief interest to the American reader, who has not the pictures before him to refer to, are Mr. Berenson's generalizations--the pages in which he sets forth his main ideas, or sums up some really important master, like Montegna or Corrreggio. His remarks...