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Word: mr (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1900-1909
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Usage:

...Muck, President Eliot, Professor Munsterberg and Professor Spalding. E. F. Hanfstaengl '09, president of the Deutscher Verein, will introduce the speakers. About one hundred guests are expected to be present, among whom will be Heinrich Gebhard, the well-known planist, President Ernst F. Henderson, of the Boston Deutsche Gesellschaft, Mr. A. von Schroeder, general manager of the Hamburg American Steamship Company, Ignaz Gaugengigl, Herr Listemann, former leader of the Boston Symphony Orchestra, Judge Otto Neitzel, Dr. Edmund von Mach, and Dr. Paul Grossmann...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Deutscher Verein Dinner for Dr. Muck | 2/3/1908 | See Source »

...examination shall not be admitted without permission of the instructor or of the officer in general charge of the examinations." Examinations Today. Architecture 2b, Robinson Hall Astronomy 3, Lower Mass. Class. Philol. 32, Sever 29 Comp. Lit. 5, Sever 18 Comp. Lit. 14, Sever 29 Economics 1: Mr. Hale's sections:-- Section A, Sever 5 Section I (I), Sever 6 Section P, Sever 17 Dr. Huse's sects., Upper Mass. Mr. McLaren's sects., New Lect. Hall Mr. Shohl's sects., Lower Mass. Mr. Usher's sects., Harvard 6 Economics 4, Sever 18 Economics 19, University 23 Engineering 8a, Pierce...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Mid-Year Examinations | 2/3/1908 | See Source »

...many was a worthy and even remarkable product of the undergraduate literary mind. There is throughout a note of maturity, due no doubt to the peculiar atmosphere of Harvard as contrasted with other universities. The main editorial, dealing with the American stage through the medium of a lecture by Mr. Percy MacKaye, is a thoughtful and unusually serious statement of modern dramatic effort. If somewhat idealistic in tone, we must remember that the idealism of youth becomes oftentimes the truth of age. The quotation from Arnold is significant: "Organize the theatre! The theatre is irresistible...

Author: By F. Ransome., | Title: Mr. Ransome Reviews Advocate | 2/3/1908 | See Source »

...Mr. Follett's verse, "Bon Voyage," is at least graceful throughout; the last two lines impress by their sincerity. Mr. Ford's "Appearances at Oxford" is an unstudied attempt to reflect the daily life of our English undergraduate cousins; occasionally the style becomes too colloquial, yet, on the whole, the article is interesting and extremely readable. The four sonnets, on familiar college types, by Mr. Tinckom-Fernandez possess a finished gaiety not often found in academic publications. "The Goody" and "The Waitress" are particularly successful. The general resemblance of the sonnets to W. E. Henley's similar series is agreeably...

Author: By F. Ransome., | Title: Mr. Ransome Reviews Advocate | 2/3/1908 | See Source »

...Song for Twilight," by Mr. Wheelock, is surprisingly mature in technique and genuinely individual. It is poetically satisfying; indeed the second and third stanzas are instinct with are potency. Mr. Porter's "Matter of Conscience" is a trifle too self-conscious to be completely successful, and neither of the two figures emerges from the scholastic vagueness of the story's atmosphere. Yet the style is one of case and experience...

Author: By F. Ransome., | Title: Mr. Ransome Reviews Advocate | 2/3/1908 | See Source »

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