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Mar. 8.- Bishop John H. Vincent, of Topeka, Kansas.
Mar. 15.- Mr. William M. Salter, of Philadelphia.
Mar. 22.- Rev. T. Edwin Brown, of Philadelphia.
The Fine Arts of the Middle Ages and of the Renaissance.Professor Moore will give six evening exhibitions of lantern slides illustrating the Fine Arts of the Middle Ages. These exhibitions will be given on successive Monday evenings, at eight o'clock, beginning February 24, in the Lecture Room of the Fogg Museum, and will be open to the public.
They will be followed later by others illustrating the Fine Arts of the Renaisance.
Department of French and Cercle Francais.Four lectures, in English, will be given under the auspices of the Department of French and the Cercle Francais, in the Lecture Room of the Fogg Museum on successive Wednesday evenings. These lectures will be open to the public. The names of the lecturers, the subjects, and the dates, are as follows:
Mar. 4.- Professor Baker: Moliere in the English Drama.
Mar. 11.- Professor Lyon: The Work of the French Assyriologists. (Illustrated).
Mar. 18.- Professor Royce: Jean-Marie Guyau, the Philosopher.
Lectures on Literature.The subjects and dates of Mr. Copeland's remaining lectures are as follows:
Mar. 3. The Life and Speeches of Lincoln.
Mar. 10. Recently published Letters of Coleridge and other well-known writers.
Mar. 17. Keats.
Mar. 27. Robert Burns.
Mar. 31. The Short Story.
Apr. 7. Shakspere in certain relations to our own time.
Apr. 14. Recollections of a Country Library.
These lectures will be given in Sever 11, at 8 p. m., and will be open to all members of the University, but not to the public.
Lectures on Physical Training.Dr. Sargent will give a course of four lectures on Physical Training in the Lecture room of the Fogg Museum on successive Thursday evenings at 8 o'clock, beginning February 20. These lectures will be illustrated by the stereopticon and by living subjects, and will be open to the public. The remaining subjects and dates are as follows:
Mar. 5.- Training and Over-training.
Mar. 12-What Harvard has done for Physical Education.
Lectures on Greek Philosophy.Professor Goodwin, at the invitation of the Classical Department, will deliver, in the latter part of March and early in April, a course of five lectures on Socrates, Plato and Aristotle, and the Earlier Greek Philosophy. The lectures, which will be open to the public, will be given in the evenings of successive Wednesdays and Fridays, beginning Friday, March 20, in the Lecture Room of the Fogg Art Museum.
Symphony Concerts.Thursday evenings, March 12, April 9, and April 30.
Assyrian Readings.Professor Lyon will give five Assyrian Readings, with stereopticon illustrations, in the Lecture Room of the Fogg Museum, on Friday afternoons at 4 o'clock. These readings are open to the public. The dates and subjects are as follows:
Mar. 6.- The Broken Wing of the South Wind. A Babylonian Myth written in the 15th century B. C., recently found in the ruins of an Egyptian library of the same date.
Mar. 13.- Marduk and the Dragon. A Babylonian Cosmogonic Myth.
Mar. 20.- Selections from an Assyrian Book of Prayers.
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