Word: outlook
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...chapters on "Russia of Today," by Henry Norman, M. P., Harvard '81, January Scribner's: "The X-Rays in Medicine," by Francis H. Williams, M.D., '77, and "The Public Library in the United States," by Herbert Putnam '83, January International: "Some Emerson Memorials," by Edward Everett Hale '39, Outlook of Dec. 29: "The Study of Mammalian Embryology" by Professor C. S. Minot, December American Naturalist: "On the Variation of the Statoblasts of Pectinatella Magniflea from Lake Michigan, at Chicago," by Professor C. B. Davenport. "Studies on the Cause of the Accelerating Effect of Heat upon Growth," by T. W. Galloway...
...Autumn Outlook" and "Student Life" contain, as usual, adequate reviews of University activities, and many valuable suggestions on the salient points of new problems...
Pennsylvania began this season with the best outlook of any of the four leading teams, with the possible exception of Yale. Her only losses from last year's team were Overfield, centre, Snover, tackle, and Outland, end. Of last year's line, Wallace, tackle, and Hare and Teas, guards, probably the three best men, remain, and with them as a nucleus the vacancies seem to have been satisfactorily filled. McCloskey has proved an able successor at centre to Overfield, whose substitute he was for two years. Horner and Zimmerman, tackles, and W. Gardiner and Hodge, ends, have filled the other...
President Eliot gave the CRIMSON the following statement last night concerning his article in the Outlook about which there has been so much discussion: "I intend to vote for President McKinley, Governor Roosevelt and Representative McCall, and I have never had any other intention...
...first page purports to be a reprint of the article by President Eliot entitled "Political Principles and Tendencies;" as only one omission is indicated, the reader is obliged to inter that the article, with the exception of that single omission, is printed just as it appeared in the Outlook. But comparison with the original shows in the reprint many other omissions, of matter which is not insignificant, but so essential to the integrity of the presentation of President Eliot's views, that in some cases what is left, because of the omission, becomes hardly intelligible, and in other cases gives...