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...Fletcher...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Interscholastic Base Ball Championship. | 6/12/1891 | See Source »

...annual dinner of the O. K. Society was held at the Vendome last night. The attendance of graduates was, owing to the unfortunate time of the year selected for the dinner, rather smaller than usual. Mr. Curtis Guild, Jr., '82, presided. Mr. J. B. Fletcher, '87, of the English Department, was the poet of the evening, and Professor G. L. Kittredge, '82. was one of the speakers. C. W. Willard, '91, A. M. White, '92, and J. Corbin, '92, were the undergraduate speakers...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: O. K. Dinner. | 6/6/1891 | See Source »

...Nicolson, A. M., in Latin. W. F. Ganong. A. M., in botany. T. W. Harris, Ph. D., in geology, Max Poll, Ph. D., in German. W. F. Osgood. Ph. D. in mathematics. W. C. Sabine, A. M., in physics. Geo. Santayana, Ph. D., in philosophy. J. B. Fletcher, A. M., in English. L. J. Johnson, A. B., S. B., in engineering. H. B. Lathrop, A. B., in English. W. M. Cole, A. B., in political economy. S. Danion, A. B., LL. B., in French...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Meeting of the Board of Overseers. | 5/29/1891 | See Source »

...fifteenth century, near Bishopsgate, where I remember once some of the officers of the British Museum took me to lunch in the restaurant which has been made of its fine old hall; and this Church of St. Saviour's, with its many dramatic memories, for here also are buried Fletcher and Massinger, the last called a "stranger" in the records of burial...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Mr. Winsor's Letter about Southwark. | 2/20/1891 | See Source »

Besides these collections are the trophies which Miss Fletcher got among the Indians, and which have already been mentioned. Various other articles of archaeological and ethnological interest have been given to the museum, among the most valuable of which are implements and masks from the Pacific islands, specimens of Peruvian pottery, various copper instruments found by a sailor in Mexico, some of the forms of which have never before been found. The copper instruments will give some clew, till now undiscovered, to the particular way that the ancients of Mexico and Central America cut stone...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Something More About the Peabody Museum. | 1/27/1891 | See Source »

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