Word: honorability
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...large and distinguished audience will be present at the exercises to do honor to Dr. Holmes. Among the special guests are the following, distinguished in literature: Julia Ward Howe, Robert Grant '73, G. W. Cable, Florence Earle Coates of Philadelphia, Professor Arlo Bates of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Professor Thomas R. Lounsbury h.'93 of Yale, and many leading professors of this vicinity who studed in the Medical School under Dr. Holmes...
...question which the first thinking man proposed to himself, the question which played so large a part in the schemes of the early Greek physical philosophers--"What is this world about us?" Like Odysseus, Mr. Blythe communes with his soul and dreams brave dreams. Mr. Tinckom-Fernandez writes in honor of the memory of Walter Pater in words which suggest Pater's style, though the title to the verse is not quite happy. Mr. Ward Shepard writes seriously on "The Spirit of Traherne." Traherne is unknown to so many of us that Mr. Shepard would have done better to have...
President Eliot will deliver an address on "The Puritan Church and the Puritan College," at a public meeting which will be held in the Old South Church, Boston, this evening at 8 o'clock. The meeting is in honor of Dr. G. A. Gordon '81, who has completed twenty-five years' service as pastor of that church: Dr. Gordon became minister at the Old South Church only three years after his graduation from Harvard. He is at present an Overseer of the University and a University preacher...
...ships visited a number of cities in Australia. They then sailed to Manila and from there to Japan. At Tokio the admiral and captains met the Mikado, receiving an honor that has seldom been conferred upon foreigners. For five days the festivities continued in honor of the squadron. At the end of that time the fleet left Japan for Manila, and after a month's gun practice it started for the United States...
...seldom that an opportunity is offered to honor a Harvard man who has achieved such instantaneous success as Edward Sheldon '08, whose first play has been hailed by the great majority of critics as a work of originality and power. Like "The Great Divide," by William Vaughn Moody '93, "Salvation Nell" is marked by intensity of interest and force of action, and its numerous passages of virile strength give promise of greater work in the future. A special performance of Mr. Sheldon's play will be given at the Majestic Theatre tonight by Mrs. Fiske and her company. Practically...