Word: reading
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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Professor Eugen Kuehnemann, visiting professor from the University of Breslau, will give a public reading in Emerson J next Tuesday evening at 8 o'clock. This reading will be in addition to the series previously announced. As November 10 is the anniversary of Schiller's birth, Professor Kuehnemann will read the last two acts of "Wallenstein." Students are requested to bring copies of the text with them...
When in 1901 the Union was formally presented to the University an address was delivered that ought to be read by every man who enters the building. It is full of a magnanimous spirit of generosity and devotion to Harvard, and cannot fail to arouse in anyone who reads it the feeling that his highest privilege as a member of the University is to give something to that University. And yet there are those who, ignorant or forgetful of this dedicatory address, even in the very building that is a monument to generosity and devotion are endeavoring to get something...
Yesterday, at 12.15 o'clock, the funeral services for Professor Norton '46, were held in Appleton Chapel. The casket was borne up the aisle by eight undergraduate pall-bearers. The Rev. E. C. Moore '78 read the burial services, which were brief and simple. There was singing by the choir and the services closed with a hymn by the congregation. The interment was private...
...natural world; under Professor Norton, of the human. In these two culture courses the speaker gave so much that there was little left for the hearers to do except to wonder, to enjoy, and to grow. Students accordingly flocked around in such numbers and eagerness as we read attended the lectures of Abelard. To be properly nourished, each age needs something that is not grown on its own soil. Besides the nutrition that is "timely," a little of that on which our forefathers fed keeps up the continuity of the stock. The methods of Mr. Norton were superbly...
Professor Eugen Kuehnemann, visiting professor from the University of Breslau, will give the first of a series of readings from German authors next Monday evening at 8 o'clock in Emerson J. The reading will be from Schiller's "Maria Stuart," and will be open to the public. In the present half-year, Professor Kuehnemann will also read from the works of Kliest, Grillparzer, and Hebbel. And in the second half-year portions of Goethe's "Faust" will be read. In addition to reading from the text, Professor Kuehnemann will make a few introductory remarks concerning each author, and will...