Word: particularity
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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Tonight's program is of particular interest on account of the large number of original compositions to be rendered, in addition to works by standard composers. Three of the seven numbers are composed by students in the Department of Music, and all will be rendered by members of the club...
...recent meeting of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, it was voted to offer the following additional half-course in the English Department: English Literature of the Eighteenth Century, with particular reference to the Sentimental School. The course will be given by Dr. E. Bernbaum, Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays throughout the second half-year at 9 o'clock, and will be known as English...
...report for work will be divided into several squads which will report at different times during the day thus making it possible for every man to work at his own convenience. Squad captains have been appointed in the field events to help superintend the work of their particular squads. A board track will soon be built on Holmes Field behind the new Law School building, where the middle and long distance work will be carried on under the supervision of Coach Lathrop, who will also instruct the sprinters in the Gymnasium. Coach Quinn will have charge of the field event...
Candidates for the gymnastic team were called out Monday. Regular practice will continue in the Gymnasium on Tuesday evenings, and daily at 5 o'clock, except on Wednesdays; and, as soon as possible, the men will be divided into squads, according to the particular kind of work which they are doing. The practice will be under the direction of men of previous experience, and C. L. Shrader, the gymnastic instructor. The only meets for which definite arrangements have been made are the intercollegiate championships to be held at the University of Pennsylvania about March 22, and the dual exhibition meet...
...most striking article in the number is a spirited rejoinder by the editor to the danger of Germanization and general depravity brought against Harvard College by one of its more recent graduates. Harvard cannot thrive without criticism, but this particular attack is unfortunate in more ways than one. The editor finds Oxfordization as perilous a development both for the College and for the critic in question-and disapproves any scheme which would tend to destroy either college spirit or class spirit. This is true: despite the amazing changes wrought by the reform of the curriculum, Harvard College is embedded...