Word: mr
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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Music will be furnished by part of the chorus of graduates which sang at the dedication of the Medical School, and has sung at other college gatherings. After the meeting they will sing at the Union, and all members of the University are invited there to meet Mr. Wister...
...Mr. Fukuta and one of his pupils illustrated a number of throws and passes, and two of his pupils had a "scuffle" which showed more throws and grips. Mr. E. O. Parker, an assistant in drawing, and ex-champion amateur wrestler of New England, then accepted Mr. Fukuta's challenge to a friendly match which the Japanese wrestler won by getting a strangle hold on his opponent after a very even contest...
...rather a design in a series--a thing necessary to the perfection of the whole, and yet complete in itself even when detached. In at least three out of the four contributions to the current Advocate, in which Incident is the motive, the suspended interest is admirably maintained. Mr. Schenck's "Paper Chase" Mr. Tinckom Fernandez's "Necessary Child," and Mr. Morgan's "Hongkong to New York," alike leave us not only with a desire for more, but with a certain childish resentment against those authors for not telling us what "happened" afterwards. Mr. Millet's "Book Agent...
...many readers the most interesting as well as the most important article, in the issue will be Mr. Brawley's contribution to "Varied Outlooks." To see ourselves as others see is always profitable, but it becomes something more, when it is with the discriminating sympathetic perception which Mr. Brawley brings to bear on us and our institutions. We should be spared much of the criticism to which Harvard is treated throughout the land if more of our friends were to put themselves at Mr. Brawley's unprejudiced point of view...
...level of this number's poetry is considerably below that of its prose. "Explanations," by Mr.E.E. Hunt, and "Voices in the Fall," by Mr. Tinckom-Fernandez, are little more than experiments in versification. Mr. Husband's "Dry Northeaster" is a spirited bit of writing, marred by a lack of technique. "Aft" does not rhyme with "mast"; nor can an adjective conclude one line, while the noun it qualifies begins the next, as in the opening of the second stanza. In Mr. Biddle's "On the Bridge" it is probably a printer's error that gives "eye" as a rhyme...