Word: presented
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1900-1909
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...does this apply only to the president. It concerns the election of the other officers as well. These offices present splendid opportunities to the men who receive them, in giving them a chance to exert their personal influence in an official capacity. The CRIMSON trusts that 1912 will seek successfully for the best...
...intended here to discourage those men from attending who have definitely chosen medicine as a profession or those, in fact, who are preparing especially for a particular profession other than this. Dean Christian is well qualified to present a complete and instructive analysis of the possibilities in his profession, of its aims and methods. He has received his training under the new methods of instruction and he is thoroughly acquainted with the field which modern medicine and surgery present to young...
...football question is always with us. Professor Royce's recent discussion of it is here made the occasion of two more, one on either side. The present reviewer finds the so-called reply to Professor Royce not at all to his taste. The tone of the article is unfortunate, its style violent, its though confused. The following paragraph is typical in its hopeless lack of logic: "Parenthetically as to 'loyalty', it is one of the moral values that I least admire. It usually implies a subjection of your own sentiments and convictions. A high enterprise needs no appeal to loyalty...
...University tea of the year will be held in the Parlor of Phillips Brooks House this afternoon from 4 to 6 o'clock. A committee of members of the Faculty and their wives, assisted by undergraduate ushers, will receive. All members of the University are cordially invited to be present...
Professor J. C. Gray '59, as he termed himself, "the oldest in commission of President Eliot's appointees," described Harvard in his undergraduate days, contrasting it with its present condition as a testimonial to the President's greatness. W. Lawrence '71, Bishop of Massachusetts, told of President Eliot's inaugural address, which he heard as an undergraduate, and of the manner in which the plans and policies then voiced have been carried out. M. D. Follansbee '92 spoke for the Harvard Club of Chicago, naming the President's visits as the most important events of its history. Dean LeBaron Russell...