Word: norton
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...December number of the Graduates' Magazine, which will be put on sale today, begins with an announcement of President Eliot's resignation. The other articles which appear in the number are: "Charles Eliot Norton," by W. R. Thayer '81; "Barbarous College Songs," by Charles Chauncey '59; "From a Graduate's Window"; "The Athletic Situation," by W. F. Garcelon L.'95; "Some New Books"; "The New Dean of the Harvard Medical School"; "Foreign Associates of National Societies," by E. C. Pickering '65; "American Ideals"; "Fluctuations of University Enrollment," by J. D. Greene '96; "Charles Harrington," by C. R. Sanger...
...Faculty of Arts and Sciences has placed on record its grateful recognition of the services rendered to the University by the late Professor Norton...
...subjects of theses and the rules governing the Charles Eliot Norton Fellowship for the current academic year are given below. The competition for this fellowship is open to Seniors and students in the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences and to Seniors and Graduate students at Radcliffe. The awards will be made on the grounds (1) of a thesis on an approved subject, and (2) of such other evidence of scholarship as may be accessible. The subjects announced for this year are as follows: 1. The Ethics of Pindar. 2. The Geography of Thucydides. 3. The Influence of Democracy...
Syracuse--P. Benjamin, E. S. Cullings, W. J. Dixon, H. M. Hitchner, L. Judd, L. D. Marble, J. G. Norton, R. H. Preston, P. A. Ross, W. J. Stube, G. L. Van Auken, C. J. Wood...
...material in the current number of the Monthly divides itself pretty sharply into two classes, one normal, the other artificial. In the first class the two editorials dealing with the late Professor Norton and the resignation of President Eliot merit decided praise. They express in clear and judicious English the appreciation and gratitude that Harvard has for these two men--one the wise and brilliant guide to the beauty of the past, the other the national leader in the advance towards intellectual freedom. In the "normal" class also belongs Mr. Grandgent's story, "The 'Medomac'." This is a thoroughly healthy...