Word: phasing
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...Tuesday morning, Dr. Endicott Peabody, of Groton School, will speak on "American and English Ideals of Sport." Dr. Naysmith, one of the first men interested in basketball, will give a talk on that subject. The third speaker, Dr. Ehler, of the University of Wisconsin will speak on some phase of college athletics. The afternoon session will be given over to reports and in the evening Dr. E. H. Nichols '86 and Dr. Young of Cornell will both talk on the subject of "Summer Baseball...
...CRIMSON. A meeting for all others interested will be held in the CRIMSON Office tomorrow evening at 7.30 o'clock. Such men will be given an opportunity to make up work they have lost and enter the competition now. The competition will prove invaluable to all interested in any phase of business...
...George has spoken many times in past years both in Cambridge and Boston; the movement in which he was a pioneer is spreading--as witness the foundation of self-governing communities for children in Connecticut, Pennsylvania and other states. As Judge Brown will give us the western and newer phase of this movement, his lecture will be of especial interest to those who know of the George Republic. To others it offers a splendid opportunity of becoming acquainted with this important aspect of social reform...
...properly. In a thoughtful and convincing article on "The Musician and the University," Mr. Echmann discuses the advantages to musicians of every type of a university training, and makes some timely suggestions to students interested in the critical and scientific side of music concerning possible fields for research, a phase of the art much cultivated in foreign universities but receiving little attention here. It is good to hear more definite news of the work of Mr. Paul Allen '03, who has made Italy his home and recently had his opera. "The Philtro," performed at Genoa. The Italian critics were warm...
...Another phase of Social Service is that of providing entertainments in the various settlement houses. There are two sorts of entertainment, both of which are eagerly looked forward to by the audiences whose changes of seeing real plays are very limited. In the first place college men give talks on such subjects as camping, which, being quite foreign to the settlement house audiences, are interesting doubly to them. The other form of entertainment is that afforded by singers, jugglers and the like...