Word: thought
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...sharp. It has been found that the afternoons are too short for runs beginning at 4 o'clock, and after today the hunts will be started at 3.15. They will probably be held every Wednesday until the season closes. Wednesday has been chosen because it is thought that more men will run on that day than any other, but if sufficient number prefer Thursday, the hunts will be held on alternate Wednesdays and Thursdays as heretofore...
...social element grows among the students from year to year. The apartments of Fay house are, indeed, too restricted to allow of as much congregation under its roof as may be thought desirable, but the accommodation is made the most of, and the spirit of fellowship is greater at present than at any other time. The Idler club and the Emmanuel society are among the means of bringing the students often together in a familiar way. To those the English club has lately been added. It is intended "to arouse an interest in the study of English," and specifically...
Tuesday, November 19-The Modern Tendency in Theological Thought. Rev. Lyman Abbott...
...dormant condition in which it has been for a year. The following officer were then elected: President, N. S. Shaler: vice president, W. M. Woodworth; recording secietary, Collier Cobb; corresponding secretary, W. M. Davis; treasurer, C. B. Davenport; librarian, H. H. Field; curator, G. H. Parker. It was thought best to elect a number of new members in order to arouse a wider interest in the society's work. The following men were then elected members: Boardman, Shaler Berry, Ganong, Young, Potter, Dodge, Gage, Woodworth, Eastman, Darling, Little, Cornish, P. K. Brown. H. T. Brown, A. Read, B. P. Cheney...
...theory have been the subject of sharp discussion in England, and since the production of "A Doll's House" in Boston last month, the interest here is scarcely less. Indeed there is some danger of an Ibsen cult equal to the recent Browning craze. But whatever may be thought of Ibsen's artistic principle, the power of his work is unquestioned, and "The Lady of the Sea" is at present of special interest because in it Ibsen suggests answers to the problems proposed by him in "A Doll's House...