Word: following
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...varsity scratch games follow on the Saturday after the inter-class games. As usual the events will be the same as at the intercollegiate games, two prizes being offered in each event...
...Libretto of the Latin Play which is now on sale is published in an admirable form and will add much interest to the performance. An English prose translation by Professor M. H. Morgan accompanies the Latin text in parallel columns and will enable those who cannot translate readily to follow the action of the play with ease. The new prologue is by Professor J. B. Greenough. Appended to the play is a series of twenty-six half-tone engravings of miniatures in the Vatican manuscript of Terence, which are here for the first time accurately reproduced, from photographs which were...
...clock. The play is "Her Portrait," written by Edward G. Knoblauch '96. A quartet, composed of Messrs. J. H. Bennett, H. Schurz, E. O. Hiler and E. V. Frothingham, will play a few selections, and Mr. Carl Pfiueger has kindly consented to sing a few German songs. Dancing will follow the performance...
...must be pitted against those of others; and in the struggle of individualities a knowledge of one's own, with its strength and weakness, is of the first importance. There were never wiser words spoken than those of old Polonius; "To thine own self be true, and it must follow as the night the day, thou canst not then be false to any man." But how can a man be true to himself, if he does not know himself; and how can he know himself if he mistrusts his own identity, and puts aside his special gifts in order...
...elements of the painting of this period combined. He was a pupil of Savonarola, and was a charming painter if not a great one. The leader of the new awakening in art in Florence was Mazatio, a man whom Raphael and Michael Angelo did not disdain to follow. Many men of other schools also were drawn to Florence who in time adopted the Florentine School. At this period there were really in Italy, but two great schools, the Florentine and the Venetian. All the others were small branches from these...