Word: fifteenths
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...slow uplift in German literature from the fourteenth to the fifteenth century was explained by the indirect reception of humanism in Germany. Humanism came in, not as worship of the beautiful, but as a species of didacticism, which was monopolized by scholars. The people neither received the fruits of it, nor were they interested in the resulting literature. Luther's Bible and the "Volkslied" represent however a marvelous development, which show what might have been reached under more favorable conditions. The "language sodalities," for ameliorating the language itself, are a further example of movements which were too exclusive...
...qualifying round of the University golf championship was held on the links of the Oakley Country Club, on Friday and Saturday of last week. G. O. Thacher '01, U. A. Murdock, Jr., '04, F. Winsor 1Gr., and F. I. Emory '02, all of whom made 100, tied for the fifteenth and sixteenth places, and must play off their tie at the Oakley course on Tuesday afternoon at 3 p. m. One hole to decide. The following men qualified for the first fourteen places...
...Douglas and Manuel Training Schools in Chicago and at Stone's School in Boston. During his year at Stones he stroked his school crew in the interscholastic races. He was actively interested in rowing and rowed on the second Weld 1902 crew last spring. He went abroad the fifteenth of June and travelled in Germany until he reached Munich, where he was was taken sick and died after a week's illness. The funeral took place in Chicago, July...
Exeter won the fifteenth annual New England interscholastic track games on Soldiers Field Saturday with a total of 28 points. The scores of ihe other schools were as follows: Andover 21 1-2; Worcester Academy 13 1-2; Cambridge High and Latin 10; Worcester High 8, Somerville High 7, Newburyport High 6 1-2, Concord (Mass.) 5, Chelsea High 2, Lynn High 1 1-2, Boston English High...
...plans which have been made this year for the fifteenth annual Northfield Student Conference, to be held from June 29 to July 8, give promise of an unusually attractive programme. The Harvard delegation will be much larger than that of last year, consisting of about twenty men instead of ten or twelve. The following speakers will be present this year, in addition to others not yet secured: Mr. Robert E. Speer, New York; Rev. C. E. Jefferson, D.D., New York; Bishop J. H. Vincent, D.D.; Rev. Wm. R. Richards, D.D., New Jersey; Professor Dyson Hague, M.A., Wycliffe College, Toronto...