Word: knowns
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...Pennsylvania. The Yale committee has agreed to furnish the gymnasium at a cost of $1,400. Princeton the billiard room. Pennsylvania the reading room, at $1,000 each. A committee of Harvard undergraduates is attempting to raise the $1,000 necessary to furnish the common room, which will be known as the Harvard Room Contributions are earnestly asked for, and may be sent to Archibald M. Brown, Randolph Hall. The committee is composed of the following men: R. Derb--'03, M. H. Birckhead '03, A. H. Fox '03, W. P. Wolcott '03, S. H. L. Dana '03, H. Peabody...
...sell, barter, or part with for any consideration any ticket except to the Committee. 3. To return between 11-12 m., Monday, June 1, such tickets as are not needed by himself and friends. The Committee reserves the right to refuse admission on tickets purchased by one who is known to have sold any tickets whatsoever...
...series of four memorial lectures, which were arranged by the department of philosophy in observance of the centennial of the birth of Ralph Waldo Emerson '21. The subject will be "Emerson as a Poet." Professor Santayana is especially fitted to speak on this subject as, besides being a well-known philosopher, he has written several books of verse, among which are: "Sonnets and Other Verses," "The Hermit of Carmel and Other Poems," and the drama "Lucifer." He is also the author of "Sense of Beauty" and "Poetry and Religion." The lecture will be open to the public...
...well known that the headaches and discomforts due to eye strain are experienced by the strong and vigorous as well as by the weak and poorly nourished. The relation of the general health to the muscles of the eye is therefore a question of interest to oculists, to persons who have such headaches and even to those in perfect health. For, if the ocular muscles of the latter are not also proportionally strong, such persons may suffer from eye strain at any time or else resort to glasses prematurely. These difficulties have received much attention of late years from aphthalmologists...
...appear to no great advantage in their present shape. The climatic conditions of Cambridge, the Water in the Yard, the Freshman and his Cash account, and the more recent material, the Union waiter has for some reason offered--are all treated in the recent issue, and are, well known to every reader. The "By the Way" has a somewhat more elaborate verbal jugglery than usual, but is otherwise quite as unreadable. The drawings in themselves are well executed, and the centre page is a remarkably accurate portrait of an actual event...