Word: latine
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1929
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...LL.D. So Clark University, which is also in Worcester, was glad to help Assumption, give the degree, share the day's festivities.* Assumption College is perhaps the tiniest and purest center of classicism in the U. S. Here are taught the Greek of Homer, Plato, Sophocles; the Latin of Virgil, Horace, Augustine; the French of Racine and Bossuet; the English of Shakespeare. For those who wish there is law, medicine. Although not stressed, science and modern languages are not ignored. Many Assumption graduates go to Harvard Law School or to Jefferson Medical College, Philadelphia. Although Assumption is a classical...
...Sever 5 Geology 17b Sever 18 German 1a. sects. 3, 4 New Fogg Lect. Rm. German 2. sects. 2, 3 Sever 11 German 12b Sever 30 Government 8 Harvard 6 Greek B 1 Sever 30 History 12 New Lect. Hall History 56b New Lect. Hall History 57b Andover B Latin 12 Sever 18 Mathematics A II Prof. Birkhoff, 1 Sever 23, 24 Mr. Brown, 2 Sever 24 Mr. Wexler, 3 Sever 35 Mr. Fox, 4 Sever 35 Mathematics C, I sects 1, 2, 3, 4 Memorial Hall Mathematics 4 Sever 36 Mineralogy 2 Mineralogical Lab. Music 6 Sever 18 Philosophy...
...production next year will be under the direction of Mason Hammond '25, Instructor and Tutor in the Department of the Classics, who had an opportunity to observe similar plays while a Rhodes scholar at Oxford. E.K. Rand '94, Professor of Latin, who acted in the "Phormio" of Terence presented in 1893, will attend the rehearsals; and F.C. Packard Jr. '20. Assistant Professor of Public Speaking, will direct the acting. The production will be open to the entire University, and probably to the public as well...
Otis Johnson Todd, at present Associate Professor of the Classics, at the University of British Columbia comes to Harvard next Fall as Lecturer on Greek and Latin...
...England led in the number of holders, with the Middle and Far West edging out the Middle Atlantic States for second place. Boston Latin scored most heavily of the high schools, represented by 37 graduates; Cambridge Latin has 18, and Boston English, seven. Of the private schools, Exeter and Andover led with 13 and five, respectively...