Word: subject
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...cannot leave this subject without adding one word of the keenest regret. To have given three years of splendid service to Harvard with a fourth well under way as a captain in every sense of the word and then to be deprived of the very thing most desired is a bitter disappointment. No man has deserved more than Captain Burr the pleasure and thrill of leading a team to victory. His has been the spirit of that team from the very first game to the last. It was wise, however, not to let him play as his shoulder...
...first session will be opened at 2 o'clock this afternoon with a prayer by Rev. G. A. Gordon '81, pastor of the Old South Church. Mr. Gifford Pinchot will read the first paper. His subject will be the future of forest trees in New England. He is generally regarded as the first authority on forestry in the United States. Professor John Craig, chief of the Department of Horticulture at Cornell, will read the second paper. His subject will be the opportunities in New England for the cultivation of orchards and the raising of fruit. The two papers will...
...account of the development of the team, Mr. Watts's survey of the football season, and Mr. Fisher's description of the present condition of the Trophy Room, complete the November tribute to outdoor sports. Mr. A. K. Jones, who rang the College bell for fifty years, is the subject of a brief article with portraits. "Says Butler" is a good character sketch, well within the range of undergraduate observation and handling. Mr. Lippman's "Reply" to Professor Wendell's "Privileged Classes" shows keen and clever fencing without quite coming to a precise issue with his involuntary antagonist. A readable...
...subject of Professor Kuehnemann's lecture this morning on the Modern German Drama will be Schiller's "Brant von Messina," and the last part of "Jungfrau von Orleans," which was not finished in the last lecture. The lecture will be given in Emerson J, at 11 o'clock...
There will be two lectures on each subject: one in the morning at 11 o'clock, open to the public; and a repetition in the afternoon at 4.15, open to teachers and students. Non-transferable season tickets may be obtained by teachers and students from Miss M. Ury 6 Marlborough street, Boston...