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

Page after page of the poem deals with undergraduate life from the inside, from the undergraduate's point of view, in terms which will be as intelligible twenty years from today as to the class of 1907. Mr. Bynner has struck out lines which phrase the Harvard College of his own time in a thoroughly representative spirit. The poem is as unique among odes as it is among works dealing with the life in American colleges. George Ade has satirized the exuberance of the western "universities"; Cornell, Princeton, Columbia and Harvard has each its volume of "stories." The striking fact...

Author: By L. M. P., | Title: NEW BOOK OF HARVARD LIFE | 6/19/1907 | See Source »

Make-up Mid-Year Examinations Today in Lower Massachusetts. Economics 16a. Examinations Today. Physics 7 Lower Mass. English A: (Assignment of Rooms, English A.) Mr. Bellows's sections, Upper Massachusetts Mr. Brooks's sections, Upper Massachusetts Mr. Chase's section, Upper Massachusetts Mr. Nutter's sections, Upper Massachusetts Mr. Post's section, Upper Massachusetts Mr. Shipherd's section, Upper Massachusetts Mr. Stearns's section, Upper Massachusetts Dr. Webster's section, Upper Massachusetts Dr. Greenough's section, Lower Massachusetts Mr. Hersey's sections, Lower Massachusetts Dr. Hutchison's sections, Lower Massachusetts Mr. Hatch's sections, Harvard...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Order of Final Examinations | 6/19/1907 | See Source »

...message for the multitude; he is right if he limits himself to the Anglo-Saxon multitude, but wrong if he remembers the Italian; for example one of the most encouraging things in our American composite life is a Sunday afternoon visit to the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston. Mr. Simonson is wrong, too, in choosing the slashing style, in throwing other critics out of court. Such phrases as "critical ephemeridae", "there is a great deal of nonsense written", are likely to put the reader out of sympathy with the writter, who has the whole field to himself; the other...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Review of the Current Monthly | 6/19/1907 | See Source »

...other numbers two mark themselves out. In "Atropos" Mr. Shipherd takes us back to the deluge and gives a keen study of self-centered emotion, a picture of the last man clambering up Ararat before the waters cover the universe. The tense tragedy of the final moment is well done. Mr. Simon's "The Blue Coat" tells the story of a poor Russian peasant woman following with high hopes on the trail of the husband who has sought a new home in this country. She discovers he has found a new bride and forgotten the old. It is an elemental...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Review of the Current Monthly | 6/19/1907 | See Source »

...book review in the number speaks patronizingly of a novel as no doubt very good of its kind, brisk, exciting, entertaining. These excellent qualities are not found in the stories of the Monthly, Mr. Adams's "Beyond the Gate," Mr. Bellows's "Brother and Sister," and Mr. Carbs's "Reveilles." Mr. Moon's "In the Track of the Turk" shows experience in an out-of-the-way corner of the world; it could have been made more tense...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Review of the Current Monthly | 6/19/1907 | See Source »

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