Word: mannerizes
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...writer of this communication was confined to his room for several days and suffered for as many weeks, last winter, from a severe cold contracted in the manner described above, and he has good reason to believe that much of the sickness which prevailed so extensively among the students during the past season was due to similar causes...
...with liltings learned from olden time." "Under the Profile" is another of Louis How's stories. It is long and at times interesting. The end is flat. "Hal Longworth," is a story of the sensational type, the hero dropping dead at the end in a very sudden and startling manner...
...subjects will be a wide one, appealing to many different tastes and yet probably interesting to all. Sometimes a single lecture will serve to cover the ground; sometimes it will require several consecutive talks. Mr. Copeland's main object will be to give in a thorough and very concise manner discussions of various subjects in the field of literature which are sought for by the student and yet are not to be had in the regular curriculum. Certain methods of treating the plays of Shakespeare, the acted drama, critical comparison of authors of different periods, current English, and possibly French...
Percy Hayes Taylor '86 died of typhoid fever in Cambridge yesterday afternoon. Since he graduated from college he has studied at times in the Graduate School and has done more or less tutoring in the modern languages. His quiet manner and his earnestness in his work won him the respect of all who knew him. The funeral will be held at St. John's Memorial Chapel tomorrow at 2 p. m. The burial will be at Baltimore...
...spite of all this, Harvard has made a last attempt. It is to refer the whole matter to an arbitration committee, whose selection is provided for in the fairest possible manner. By the decision of this committee she will abide. Yale is now called upon either to accept or decline this proposition. If she accepts we can readily forgive her unwillingness before to meet us fairly and squarely. If she declines, she will condemn herself in the eyes of every just and reasonable person, and expose herself to a suspicion which we cannot, at least would...