Word: fellows
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...Greek Literature in Harvard University; Charles Eliot Norton, professor of the history of art, emeritus, in Harvard University; James Coolidge Carter, for many years president of the New York Bar Association; Joseph Hodges Choate, ambassador of the United States at the Court of St. James; Henry Lee Higginson, fellow of Harvard University; Richard Olney, former Secretary of State; Whitelaw Reid, editor of the New York Tribune; James Bradley Thayer, professor of law in Harvard University; Charles William Dabney, president of the University of Tennessee; Horace Howard Furness, editor of the Variorum edition of Shakespeare's Works; Basil Lanneau Gildereleeve, professor...
...exercises today began with services in Battell Chapel at 10.30. President Hadley read from the Scriptures. Rev. J. H. Twichell, senior fellow of the corporation, preached, and ex-President Dwight pronounced the benediction. In the afternoon, Rev. Professor George Park Fisher, D.D., Dean of the Yale Theological School, spoke on "Yale in its Relation to Christian Theology and Missions." In the evening an organ recital was given by Professors Sanford and Jepson. Throughout the day the campus was crowded by visitors viewing the decorations. Elaborate preparations have been made for the dramatic performance to be given by students...
...roll of honor for all time, which moves us. We think of other friends who have run equal chances of danger, and have fought the long battle of life as bravely; men who have made this University what it is, or who have rendered distinguished services to their fellow-citizens and their country - we think of the many men who, leading useful lives in the background, are rarely mentioned, but whose memories are cherished by their classmates...
...keep safe and guide aright our fellow-graduate, Theodore Roosevelt, President of the United States
...loci", affecting the lives of men in successive classes, and forming a standard by which they judge others. "The undergraduate standard of honor for college officers is so sensitively high that no one need despair of the students' ethical intelligence. . . .In some ways all this is healthy. A young fellow who sees a high standard of truth for anybody's conduct may in time see it for his own. All he needs is to discover that the world was not made for him only; and a year or two out of college should teach him that...