Word: josiah
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...determines the success or failure of that work. In the move to make intellectual activity as popular and attractive as competition in athletics, we take it upon ourselves to suggest that a similar final and supreme test be established in the realm of scholarly pursuits. Several years ago Professor Josiah Royce made this same suggestion, when he proposed that a literary competition be instituted between Harvard and Yale, and that a suitable prize be offered for the winning work...
Professor Josiah Royce, of the Department of Philosophy, will deliver the seventh of the series of eight lectures on "The Problems of Christianity" in Huntington Hall, 491 Boylston street, Boston, this evening at 8 o'clock. The subject for this evening's address is "The Christian Doctrine of Life." The lectures, which are given under the auspices of the Lowell institute, are free and open to the public...
Professor Josiah Royce, of the Department of Philosophy, will deliver the sixth lecture of the series on "The Problem of Christianity", in Huntington Hall, 491 Boylston street. Boston, this evening at 8 o'clock. The subject for this particular lecture is "Atonement." The lecture will be free and open to the public, provided tickets are obtained in advance from the Curator of the Lowell Institute, 491 Boylston street...
Professor Josiah Royce, LL.D., of the Department of Philosophy, will give a course of free public lectures under the auspices of the Lowell Institute. The general theme prevailing through the eight lectures is embodied in the subject "The Problem of Christianity." The lectures will be given in Huntington Hall, 491 Boylston street, Boston, at 8 o'clock on Monday and Thursday evenings, commencing next Monday evening, November...
...service as a college dormitory, Hollis has sheltered some of the most celebrated of Harvard men. Among them have been Ralph Waldo Emerson '21; the orators Edward Everett 1811 and Wendell Phillips '31; the historians George Bancroft 1817, Francis Parkman '44, and Charles Francis Adams '25; the great jurists Josiah Quincy '63, and Joseph H. Choate '52. President Lowell and President Eliot were also residents of the hall during their undergraduate days...