Word: shortly
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...guests on arriving at the Union will gather in the Assembly Room, where Professor Kuehnemann will hold a short reception. The dinner will have the character of a German supper, and typical German national dishes will be served. There will be German entertainments and a number of student songs will be sung, among them the new Verein song with words by H. Hagedorn '07 and music by A. M. Hurlin...
...short speech in reply to an enthusiastic ovation at the beginning of his lecture in Government 1 yesterday morning, President Lowell emphasized his need of undergraduate co-operation in the carrying out of his plans. He defined his conception of the relation between college and university, which in his judgment should not be separated from each other. President Lowell declared that the ideal which he wished Harvard to attain was the development of men well-trained in every respect...
...Dramatic Club will give its last performance this evening at 8 o'clock in Brattle Hall. The production consists of four short plays entitled "The Heart of the Irishman," by L. Hatch '05; "The Horse Thieves," by H. Hagedorn '07; "Death and the Dicers," by F. Schenck '09; and "Five in the Morning," by H. Hagedorn...
...game opened promisingly for the University team. Lanigan hit the second ball pitched to right centre for a single. He stole second and Harvey was given his base on balls. Brown advanced both runners a base by a sacrifice. Aronson then hit to the short-stop, who threw Lanigan out at the plate. Aronson and Harvey tried a double steal, but the latter was called out by the umpire on a throw from the second baseman to the catcher...
...should stimulate public spirit. These quotations from President Eliot, expressing his profound faith in a democratic society trained and enlightened as he would have it, are, I think, what will strike German readers most in the articles. They are also what will most interest the American public. A short account of the official arrangements at Harvard naturally contains much that is commonplace to us here, while on the other hand it passes over many things which belong to the true inwardness of the situation and which we think essential to the life and value of the place...