Word: masterful
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...Reverend Professor Harry Emerson Fosdick, Ph.D., LL.D., of the Union Theological Seminary, New York, N. Y., widely known as the author of "The Manhood of the Master," will speak at the regular weekly meeting of the Christian Association in Phillips Brooks House Sunday morning at 9.45 o'clock. The subject of the discussion will be "The Privilege of the Christian Life." All members of the University cordially invited...
...most important and beautiful painting by the great 16th century master, Tintoretto, has just been placed on exhibition, as a loan, in the gallery of the Fogg Art Museum. The picture, the subject of which is "Diana," comes close to the series of smaller mythological subjects, each with a few figures arranged in a single plane against a landscape background, the best known of which form the decoration of one of the rooms in the Ducal Palace in Venice. Like them, the picture at the Fogg Museum, although extremely simple in its expression, is masterly in design, and it exhibits...
...Fogg Museum has received from an anonymous lender the loan of a large and beautiful picture by Rogier Van der Weyden, the great Flemish master of the fifteenth century, whose works are so rare and so much valued. It will be on exhibition until Wednesday. The subject is "Noll me tangere." The picture has been placed in the gallery beside the diptych attributed to the same artist, which is one of the most important pictures in the permanent collection at the museum...
...second football team will hold its annual dinner which marks the close of the season at the Harvard Club of Boston this evening at 7 o'clock. Head Coach R. F. Guild '07 will be the toast-master and the honorary guests will be P. D. Haughton '99, W. D. Sullivan '83. F. W. Moore '93, and J. D. Merrill '89 of the Boston Globe, as well as coaches W. Blake '05, W. Fultz, F. J. O'Brien '14, and P. M. Brown...
...knows nothing about music can create in himself the power of musical enjoyment. From the educational point of view, moreover, it is almost a requisite in a man who boasts a college degree, that he be acquainted, in an elementary way, at least, with the world's greatest master-pieces of music. Strangely enough, with the progress of civilization, music has become more and more of a minor factor in general culture. The great statesman, Themistocles, was derided because he could not play the harp, yet we are not the least bit ashamed to admit that, with no thought...