Word: shows
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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Beside these more notable additions many other interesting specimens-both casts and originals-are on exhibition. It was the late Professor Louis Agassiz's plan to arrange the exhibits in the Museum so as to show the succession of life from the earliest periods to our own time. For this purpose a room has been set apart for each great period. Although the collections are not yet complete, it is the intention to make them so, when it will be possible to study the manifold changes and developments in the life of the globe...
...open for the inspection of members of the university and their friends and the public. The attendants will be present and the lights kept burning from eight until ten o'clock. The whole gymnasium will be open and a very favorable opportunity will thus be given for students to show their friends those parts of the building which, during the regular week-day work, are closed...
...Banjo and Mandolin Clubs will assist at a Living Poster Show to be given at Brookline this evening in aid of the Brookline Day Nursery...
...officers of the camera club deserve to be commended for the efforts that they have made to make the present exhibition as good, if not better, than those that have preceded it. The students can show their appreciation of the good work of the club by visiting the exhibit in large number. As announced in another column, all students are invited and there are no tickets required...
...which tended toward revolution. Servitude determined all conditions of the time, adsolutely hindering the country's development. It was an organic part of the nation's life, which it was almost impossible to extract. When in 1861 Alexander II proclaimed the abolition of servitude the whole country rose to show its fitness for freedom. The emancipated peasants received land, thus acquiring not only the right but the power of being free. Seldom has a reform exerted so destructive an influence on that which it supercedes...