Word: london
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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Arrangements for the annual boat races with Yale will be completed at a conference between the representatives of the University and Yale this afternoon at 1.30 o'clock at the Parker House, New London, Conn. The date, hour, and direction of the University, the University four-oar, and Freshman crew races will be decided upon. Yale will be represented by Captain R. C. Morse, Manager W. S. Moorhead, and J. Curtis. Captain O. D. Filley '06, Manager W. F. Emerson '06, and J. F. Perkins '99, chairman of the Graduate Committee on Rowing, will represent the University...
Twenty-five newspapers, besides the Boston papers, are regularly received. Most of these come to us as gifts from Harvard clubs or Harvard graduates in different cities of the United States. For the "London Times," we are indebted to M. H. P. Arnold, of Pasadena, California...
...Hall is a graduate of the Union Theological Seminary, of which he is now president, has studied at Edinburgh and London, and holds an honorary degree of D.D. from Harvard, Yale, and New York Universities. He is an experienced lecturer, and has delivered the Carew lectures at the Hartford Theological Seminary, and, by appointment from Chicago University, the Barrows lectures, which are delivered annually in the leading cities of India, Ceylon, and Japan. Last year he was appointed Cole lecturer to Vanderbilt University at Nashville, Tenn...
Young Chartley had been betrothed to Luce, a girl of his own county, but the night before his wedding, he ran away to London, where the opening of the play finds him. Here he became much enamored of another Luce, a goldsmith's daughter, whom he planned to marry at the house of the Wise-Woman. Boyster, "a blunt fellow," also loved the gold smith's daughter, but he had made no progress in his courtship. Meanwhile the country Luce had come to London after Chartley, and, disguised as a page, she overheard the plans for the wedding. She then...
...lectures given last week included the following. Mr. L. T. Powers gave a dramatic recital of "David Garrick;" Mr. M. E. Stone spoke on "The Influence of the Newspaper in American Life;" Mr. Jack London gave a rather radical address on "The Coming Crisis;" Professor G. H. Palmer gave the second of the Harvard lectures, his subject being "Some Aspects of Ethics," and Mr. H. W. DuBois delivered a most interesting address on "Alaska." Ninety-eight men reported for the first trials for the Dramatic Club...