Word: knowns
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...first article in the current number of the Monthly, Professor Taussig's article on the late Professor Dunbar, as the record of a singularly active and varied life, is perhaps the most interesting of the number. As Professor Taussig points out, Professor Dunbar was little known to the undergraduates of the present day, but his activity and industry were such as few men are capable of. Editor of a newspaper before he was thirty, first professor of Political Economy at Harvard, he again took up, after a period of fifteen years, the editorship of his old paper, and after...
...every one knows that club was a complete and glaring failure. The reasons for this failure are probably known to many, but it is well that every one should know and understand the exact situation...
Captain Reid addressed the men, briefly outlining the new plan of classifying the candidates. As the squad is so large, it would be detrimental to the development of men of known ability to keep them with the larger number of candidates who have had less experience. A University squad, therefore, will be formed at once, and will practice separately. The second squad may be sub-divided if its size demands. It was also announced that Hamilton, of the Boston National League, had been secured to coach in base-running and basesliding...
...authoritative statement. By far the greater part of the work done in the College is done by men who are absolutely independent. It is not money alone which stimulates men in scholarly pursuits, all of which is very commendable and perhaps natural. But it is not so well known that "many deserving and needy students fail to win any scholarships; and that there is yet no danger whatever of a superabundance of scholarships in Harvard College...
...first number on the programme will be Grieg's "Peer Gynt Suite." For the better understanding of the music, and in order to make Ibsen's earlier poetic work better known in the community, Dr. Schofield will deliver a lecture on Ibsen's "Peer Gynt" in the Lecture Room of the Fogg Museum, February 15, at 3.45 p. m. This lecture will be open to the public