Word: viewing
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...about to be made to Harvard University. A year ago last April, after the friendly reception of his royal highness Prince Henry of Prussia by the people of the United States, there was formed in Berlin a committee of leading men of science, art, literature and finance, with the view of supplementing the emperor's donation by a gift from the German people. The committee decided upon a collection of galvanoplastic reproductions of representative works of German gold and silver work. This costly collection is now nearly completed, and I have been authorized to state that...
...should appear from this statement that the Harvard protest was made in due course, that it contained no charges of unfair practices, and that the points raised were of such a nature that a difference of view might obtain without involving any breach of friendly relations
...over the University of Pennsylvania by a score of 17 to 10. The crowd of 25,000 enthusiastic spectators saw an exhibition of exceedingly spirited football, and a contest that was sensational and exciting from start to finish. That the game should have been so stirring, was remarkable in view of the almost total absence of runs of more than fifteen yards in length. But there came continual unexpected changes in the relative advantage of play that left the result of the game decidedly in doubt until within a few minutes...
...meeting of the advisory and executive committees of the Intercollegiate Amateur Athletic Association of America in New York, Saturday night, arrangements were made to visit Franklin Field in Philadelphia and the Stadium here with a view to the selection of grounds for the intercollegiate meet next spring. A report will be made to the general meeting of the Association in February. Designs for the new intercollegiate cup were submitted, but no definite selection was made. It was decided to hold a meeting of the cross country committee in Philadelphia on November 7, to decide on the place to hold...
...must be regarded as an important factor, in the great success which the University debating teams have won. This is not to say that the members of the teams are looked upon as passive material, to be moulded by the coach according to his will. Such a point of view is utterly foreign to the Harvard system, which, on the contrary, strives to make the University debater fully dependent on his own discretion and best judgment, holding out to him as an ideal that he should know his subject so thoroughly as to be able to take part...