Word: visits
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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Each member of the committee will invite ten or twelve Freshmen to his room, and is expected to visit them personally if possible...
...inducement which was formerly held out to the clubs. A recent writer in the Monthly complained justly of the deplorable lack of interest shown by undergraduates in important current public questions and we are continually being urged to take an active interest in these questions by prominent men who visit us, as we were by the Bishop of London Tuesday night. The proposed plan for informal congenial discussion groups furnishes an excellent opportunity to get acquainted with such public questions during the coming winter, and to get valuable training in preparation for the Pasteur Medal debate this fall...
...object of Bishop Ingram's visit to this country is to attend the tercentenary of the establishment of the Church of England in America, which is now being celebrated in Richmond, V,. During his short stay in the south he has completely won the hearts of the people by his simple, unaffected manner and by his vigorous Christian words. On Sunday afternoon, when he gave his farewell address at a great open air mass meeting, fully five thousand people crowded the steps of the Capital at Richmond to hear him speak. Bishop Lawrence '71, as chairman of the house...
...delegates to the annual convention of the Nationalk German American Alliance, which has recently been in session in New York City, will visit the University today where they will be the guests of Professor Francks, Professor Munsterbeing and Professor Paul Clemens of Boun. The trip to Cambridge and the inspection of the exhibits in the Germanic Museum which is the centare of Teutonic art in America is a prominent feature of the convention, whose aim is to foster German art and science in the United States and a promote friendly relations between the two countries...
...object of Bishop Ingram's visit to this country was to attend the tercentary of the establishment of the Church of England in America. As Bishop of London, to which diocese he was appointed in 1901, thereby becoming in importance second only to the Archbishops of York and Canterbury, he is well known to the world, but to the London poor he is best known as Bishop of Stepney, an office which he held previous to his appointment to the bishopric of London. Graduated from Oxford in 1881, he became, three years later, a curate at St. Mary's, Shrewsbury...