Word: mention
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...last evening maintained and in some respects even surpassed the standards established in previous years. A program at once well-balanced and varied showed amply the resources within the club. With performances of remarkably even merit it is perhaps invidious to attempt detailed criticism of the separate members. Especial mention may well be made of Mr. Moeldner's piano solos for their unusual technical finish, their repose and grasp of interpretive elements. Mr. Moeldner played excellently at the concert of last year; he nevertheless shows consistent advance in every respect particularly in his command of touch and tone. His interpretations...
...Pasteur Medal for Debating was awarded to Henry Epstein '16, of Brooklyn, N. Y., in the fifteenth annual contest held in Sever 11 last evening. Louis Charles Henin uC., of Springfield, was given honorable mention. Six other contestants also discussed the question, "French Experience in the Administration of Railroads," for ten minutes each...
...following members of the Medical School: Elliott C. Cutler, of Brookline, A.B. '09, of the fourth year class; Edwin P. Lehman, A.B. '10 (Williams), of Redlands, Cal., of the third year class; and William A. Perkins A.B. '12, of Ogden, Utah, of the second year class. In addition, honorary mention was made of William R. Ohler S.B. '10, of Bethel, Conn., of the third year class, and Neuton Stern A.B. '12, of Memphis, Tenn., of the second year class, both of whom had a high enough rank to receive John Harvard Fellowships, but were ineligible because they held other scholarships...
...catalogue much valuable information can be found. It contains the addresses of all the students in the University, information concerning fellowships, scholarships, the Faculty, the College, the Graduate Schools, the Law School, the Medical School, the Library, the laboratories, the museums, Radcliffe, and much more too detailed to mention...
Already something like this Columbia experiment has been tried here at Harvard unofficially in connection with certain courses, and has been found to work with fair success, when limited to "honor men." In History 1, to mention only one example, the evening collateral conferences proved to add much to the interest of the course. But the plan as applied to undergraduates in general has its drawbacks. If undergraduate "human nature" were perfect, or if all the distractions,--subtle and otherwise,--which lead to procrastination and alas! too often to the professional tutor, could be swept away, then the "conference programme...