Word: uppers
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...Republican Club held a mass meeting in Upper Massachusetts, last evening, which was attended by over 300 students. R. C. Davis, president of the club, conducted the meeting and announced that an arrangement had been made with the colleges of this vicinity for a parade of college Republican clubs to take place in Boston during the last week in this month. He also read a letter from the Republican State Committee stating that body would assist only those organizations which are strictly Republican, and would assist the Harvard Republican Club as much as possible. L. L. Gillespie, treasurer...
...Republican Club will hold a mass meeting in Upper Massachusetts tonight. There will be short speeches, a discussion of the plans for the parade, and an election of vice-presidents from 1900, the Medical, Law and Divinity Schools...
...many plans and photographs Professor Dorpfeld sought, with marked success, to give his hearers a picture of the results of the excavations. Nine strata had been found one over the other, marking the site of nine different settlements, each of which in its turn had been destroyed. In the upper stratum Roman buildings were uncovered, including a stately temple of Athena built of marble, and three theatres, and many colonnades and houses. Countless marble inscriptions record that this city was called Ilion, and that some of its buildings were erected by the Roman emperors. Under these Roman buildings...
Professor Dorpfeld, by means of a vertical section of the hill, which showed the different strata one above the other, made it very clear how Schliemann came to overlook the upper citadel...
...photographs of the masterpieces of various artists, which for the past year have hung in the upper room in the Fogg Art Museum have all, with the exception of those of Michael Angelo, been taken down and others substituted in their places. Those which have been on exhibition are now placed in the cabinets with the remainder of the collection, where they may still be seen by those desiring to make a study of such subjects. The collection now numbers about fifteen thousand, and it is intended, for the sake of variety, to change those on exhibition each year...