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Word: herbert (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
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...Davis, of Boston, Francis Baylies Dean, of Flushing, L. I., N. Y.; Henry Rice Guild, of Nahant; Walter Staunton Mack, Jr., of New York; Henry Whitney Minot, of Boston; Francis Trow Spaulding, of Newtonville; Theodore Ellis Stebbins, of New York; and Charles Paine Winsor, of Concord; Advertisements and Subscriptions, Herbert Bartlett Courteen, of Milwaukee, Wis., (chairman), Eli Phelps Ellsworth, of Boston; Wallace Fleming, of New York; James Paul Warburg, of New York; and Charles Tukeman Ward, of Brookline...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: 1917 RED BOOK COMPETITION OVER | 5/7/1914 | See Source »

...Freshman negative team that will oppose Yale in the New Lecture Hall is composed of Herbert Henry Scheier, of Cambridge; Leonard Solon Levy, of Cleveland; Abe Robert Ginsburgh of Wilkes Barre, Pa.; and John Richard Gilman of Everett, and Edward Forbes Smiley, of Winchester, alternates. Yale 1917 will be represented by Roy Claflin Bridgman, of Lake Forest, Ill.; Milton Sylvester Waldman, of Cleveland, O.; Williard Stuart McKay, of Plainfield, N. J.; and Frederick King Weyerhaeusar, of St. Paul, Minn. The judges will be Admiral Francis T. Bowles, Member of the Port of Boston; Clarence C. Smith, A.M. '87, Recorder Massachusetts...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: IMMIGRATION DEBATE TOMORROW | 5/7/1914 | See Source »

...Religion, will deliver the annual Ingersoll Lecture on the Immortality of Man in Emerson D this evening at 8 o'clock. He will speak on the classical system of the transmigration of souls in India and Greece, and will also touch on the modern system. Last year Professor George Herbert Palmer '64 was the lecturer. The subject of tomorrow's address, which is open to the public, is "Metempsychosis...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: "Metempsychosis" Ingersoll Subject | 5/5/1914 | See Source »

Austin Teaching Fellows: in Botany, George Safford Torrey '13; in Zoology, Leslie Brainerd Arey 2G., Herbert Green-leaf Coar, and David Henry Wenrich, 2G., in Chemistry, James Bryant Conant 1G., William Ward Davies 1G., Tenny Lombard Davis 1G., Morris Folger Hall 1G., and Greek and Latin, Lester Burton Struthers 3G.; in Mathematics, Rolland Ryther Smith '15; in Philosophy, Ralph Mason Blake 3G., and Henry Thomas Moore 3G.; in Psychology, John Henderson Beazley 2G.; in the Cryptogamic Herbarium, Arthur Bliss Seymour G.S. '84, in Zoology, Alfred Clarence Redfield 1G. Victor Vugve...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: NUMEROUS POSITIONS FILLED | 5/5/1914 | See Source »

...what it might. The present number of the Monthly was, I am told, intended to be a "Poetry" number. It contains four poems and a piece of metre which essays to imitate a freight train crossing a bridge, and succeeds. Of the four poems the best is that by Herbert Bates '90, which serves as a heading to Mr. Trynin's story. Mr. Garland's verses "The Lee Shore" have spirit and simplicity, two excellent things. The other two contain such lines as "to take life naked at primeval hands," "that men have meant me nothing," "crossing the languorous lilts...

Author: By R. E. Rogers ., | Title: "Amachure" Verse in Monthly | 5/2/1914 | See Source »

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