Word: fellowe
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...body although more representative than the old, will suffer from the same fatal defect. The scholar, the athlete, and the litterateur are all members of the new Council; but where, in the parlance of the newspapers, do the "common people" come in? Here is X, an able fellow, who is considered too much an ass to make the CRIMSON; and there is Y, too light for an "H," too prosaic for the Monthly, and too meagre in actual attainment for the Phi Beta Kappa. They are men of ideas, and (which is quite as important) leisure As graduates...
...Guenter Jacoby, privatdozent at the University of Greifswald, and research fellow in philosophy at Harvard, will lecture in German on "Herder und Goethe in Strassburg," in Emerson J this afternoon at 4.30 o'clock. The lecture will be open to the public. This is the first of a course of six lectures, in German, on the subject of Herder's influence on Goethe's Faust...
Under the auspices of the department of Germanic Languages and Literatures, Dr. Guenter Jacoby, privatdozent at the University of Greifswald, and research fellow in Philosophy at Harvard, will deliver a course of six lectures, in German, on the subject of Herder's influence upon Goethe's "Faust." The lectures will deal largely with new material and will present a new view of Herder's relation to the "Faust" problem. They will be given in Emerson J, at 4.30 P. M., and will be open to the public. The dates and titles are as follows...
...ability to establish and maintain an esprit de corps, his forcefulness, his insight, and finally his finally his common sense. We have had more than one case at Harvard, in the last twenty years, of the choice of an unsuitable captain mainly because he was popular--'a good fellow,' so to speak--one whom every one liked. It is a great mistake. She has made it conspicuously on two occasions, but it is written down that that thing must not happen again. If one can generalize about this question of choosing a captain, I should say that Harvard has chosen...
...then for four years in the Harvard Medical School, from which, two years later, he received the degree of M. D. He studied with Agassiz in the Cambridge Museum, and accompanied a scientific expedition to Brazil. He worked at painting under William Hunt, with John La Farge as a fellow pupil. His home training gave him power of expression, for in that home brilliant conversation and literary skill were traditional; while philosophy was at the same time set before him, on the one hand by his theological father and on the other by his rationalistic friend, Chauncey Wright. He early...