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President Arthur Twining Hadley h.'99, of Yale University, lectured last evening in the Living Room of the Union on "Opportunities for Political Influence." The most obvious way of going into public life, President Hadley said, is for a man to take offices to which he is elected and trust...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: PRES. HADLEY'S ADDRESS | 1/14/1904 | See Source »

The strongest articles in the present number take the form of literary criticism. Mr. R. M. Green who graduated two years ago, writes sympathetically of "Two Academic Poets;" Mr. R. B. Perry reviews Professor Palmer's "Nature of Goodness;" and Mr. Bell discusses "The Harvard Story," in a manner which...

Author: By Barrett Wenbill., | Title: Criticism of January Monthly. | 1/11/1904 | See Source »

Professor N. S. Shaler '62, Dean of the Scientific School, sailed from Boston on January 2, for Egypt, where he will remain until about March 1. He will go up the Nile to Khartoum, and perhaps, if the conditions are favorable, will take some caravan trip. He will then travel...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Professor Shaler's Foreign Trip. | 1/4/1904 | See Source »

The first presentation of Beaumarchais' "Le Barbier de Seville" was given by the Cercle Francais last night in Brattle Hall. The play is perhaps the most difficult yet attempted by the Cercle Francais, and their rendering of it was upon the whole satisfactory. The rapid dialogue and swift action of...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: French Play a Success. | 12/18/1903 | See Source »

"Perhaps some of you will do us the favor to write a novel in which that scene shall be the best scene, and these gentlemen shall quote some of their best verses. Our benefactor was a favorite of Cromwell's. We know that Cromwell loved New England and New Englanders...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: AWARD OF ACADEMIC HONORS. | 12/16/1903 | See Source »