Word: generalized
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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Harvard will send a series of photographs to the Paris exposition which will represent the football, baseball, rowing, tennis and track athletics in the University. The pictures selected are those which most clearly indicate the position of athletics on the field, the general proportions of the athletic grounds, the manner in which they are laid out, and the amount of interest which is taken in them...
...list of views is as follows: Football -- A dozen instantaneous views, principally of the Brown game, and a general picture of a Yale game several years ago. Baseball -- A photograph of a Princeton game on Holmes Field, two of batting practice, and views of the exterior and interior of the Cage. Rowing--A dozen snap-shots of crews on the Charles and a picture of an eight practicing in the tank of the old Carey building. Track athletics--Two views of high jumping and one of a runner starting. Tennis--A birds-eye view of Jarvis Field with...
Under the general head, "English Literature of the Nineteenth Century: A Retrospect," Professor Lewis E. Gates is contributing a series of essays to the Critic. The first of the series entitled "The Romantic Movement" appears in the January number...
...exhibit will furthermore contain samples of the publications of the museum, an explanation of the system used in exhibiting and labelling specimens, and a general synopsis of the instruction given in the department...
...legislation relating to it also shows, we think, that the President's home, during the earlier years of the College at any rate, was regarded as almost if not quite as necessary for the purpose of the institution as dormitories and dining halls. Public money was appropriated by the General Court to build it, as it had been to build the College buildings, and the occupancy of it was considered as altogether official. It seems to us that on these facts the dominant and principal occupancy by the President cannot fairly be regarded than that for which the College...