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During the rest of February and March several indoor athletic meetings will be held in different parts of the state at which a number of Harvard men are expected to run. The fifteenth of this month the Worcester City Guards hold a meet at Worcester and on the twenty-second in the same place Holy Cross College holds open games. On the twenty-second also the Roxbury Latin School will hold open handicap games. Harvard has been invited to send entries to all these meetings. Later on, in the early part of March, the interscholastic indoor games will be held...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE MOTT HAVEN SQUAD. | 2/9/1897 | See Source »

...course will cover German Religious Painting and Sculpture from the Van Eycks to Albert Durer and Peter Vischer, with reference to the Religious Drama of the Fifteenth Century. It will be given Monday, Wednesday and (at the pleasure of the instructor) Friday at 3.30 p. m. The course is open to graduates and undergraduates...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: A Change in German Courses. | 1/18/1897 | See Source »

With the aid of lantern slide illustrations, he then sketched the progress of architecture in Italy during the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Italian Renaissance. | 1/12/1897 | See Source »

...spirit was essentially mundane and finally became, in imitation of the Greeks, a mere effort to depict physical beauty. The Italian antists, however, took the later Graeco-Roman period for a model rather than the classic Greek and in consequence took eventually a very artificial tone. In the fifteenth century this was less noticeable, but in the sixteenth century art became very artificial and in many cases coarse. The really great work of the Italian Renaissance was in sculpture and painting, which was perhaps the greatest the world has ever seen. The architecture of the period did not show much...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Italian Renaissance. | 1/12/1897 | See Source »

This morning in Harvard 1, at 12 o'clock, Professor Dorpfeld will discuss the situation of Enneacrunus, the famous fountain of Athens which Thucydides tells us, in the fifteenth chapter of the second book of his History, was beautified and adorned by the tyrant Pisistratus. His interpretation of this famous passage will give members of the University a capital opportunity to observe his method...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: TIRYNS AND MYCENAE. | 10/17/1896 | See Source »

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