Word: un
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...will be printed on the ballot in the order in which they are arranged above. The five who receive the largest number of votes will be elected for the full term of six years, and the sixth and seventh in number of votes will be elected to fill the un-expired terms of Dr. Hyde and Mr. Wendell...
...deWolf '18 Sainclair, I. G. Williams '20 M. de Marquet, P. V. Donovan '18 Le Pere Jacques, P. Ayme-Martin, 1L Arthur Rance, C. L. Larrabee '19 La Souris, G. Baker '20 Maleine, J. B. Fenno '21 L'Avocat, J. B. Fenno '21 Bernier, H. Teplow '20 Un Huissier, H. Teplow '20 Brigadier, M. Cowley '19 Le president des Assises, N. Thayer '21 Mathilde, Margaret Carver, 1918 Edith Rance, Marian Graves, 1918 La Mere Bernier, Mary Peabody, 1919 Premiere Invitee, Elizabeth Stufflebeam, Unc. Deuxieme Invitee, Marian Harris...
...program will consist of the following numbers: Fugue in G minor, Bach Andante Cantabile, Franck Minuet, Boellmann Arabesque, Vierne Adagio (6th Symphony), Widor Allegretto, Volkmann Psalm, Marcello "Sur un theme breton," Ropartz Grand Choeur, Guilmant
Graduates interested in the College as an institution will probably attach greatest importance to the articles by our French visitors,--"Harvard Revisited," by Professor Cestre, and "Impressions d'un Instructeur Militaire Francais," by Lieutenant Morize. The former discovers that in spite of the physical changes to be expected during his 20 years' absence, Harvard has preserved its most characteristic features, both in its appearance and in its social life. But he also finds at work a new spirit, leading away from the mechanical German methods of literary study towards the French academic standard which inculcates respect for the human...
...have not altogether justified our trust in them. Errors are pointed out and discussed, in order to have them remedied. Not from malice nor from political prejudice do we try to discover faults, but the benefit by their elimination. At the same time, however, dissatisfaction over one subject causes un-intentional blindness to the merits of others, as we are silently contented to make few comments on beneficent results, or because a steady success attracts only casual attention, we over-emphasize the mistakes. There do exist, nevertheless, numerous causes for satisfaction, which deserve favorable criticism no less than others deserve...