Advertisement

No Headline

(Continued from third page.)

nent court of arbitration should be established between England and the United States."

Principal Disputants.- Affirmative: M. G. Seelig and T. S. Williams.- Negative: H. A. Bigelow and G. L. Paine.

Open to all members of the University.

Vesper Service. Appleton Chapel, 5 p. m.

Advertisement

Christian Association. Regular Meeting. Topic: An Example for Life. Mr. W. H. Porter '98. Holden Chapel, 6.45 p. m.

Open to the public.

20. Friday.Commencement Parts. Professor A. S. Hill will confer with seniors concerning their Commencement Parts. Sever 1, 11.30 a. m. to 12.30 p. m.

Assyrian Readings. V. Selections from an Assyrian Book of Prayers. Professor Lyon. Lecture Room of the Fogg Museum, 4 p. m.

Open to the public.

Divinity School. Preaching Service. Mr. A. Hall. Divinity Chapel, 7.30 p. m.

Open to the public.

Lecture. I. The Earlier Greek Philosophy before Socrates. Professor Goodwin. Lecture Room of the Fogg Museum, 8 p. m.

Open to the public.

Appleton Chapel-Sunday Evenings.Mar. 15.- Mr. William M. Salter, of Philadelphia.

Mar. 22.- Rev. T. Edwin Brown, D. D. of Philadelphia.

Mar. 29.- Rev. Professor Francis G. Peabody, D. D., of Cambridge.

April 5.- Rev. Professor Francis G. Peabody, D. D., of Cambridge.

April 12.- Rev. George William Douglas, D. D., of New Haven, Conn.

Symphony Concerts.Thursday evenings, April 9, and April 30.

Lectures on Literature.The subjects and dates of Mr. Copeland's remaining lectures are as follows:

Mar. 17. Keats.

Mar. 27. Robert Burns.

Mar. 31. The Short Story.

Apr. 7. Shakespeare 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.

St. Paul's Society.Lenten Sunday Sermons in Christ Church, 10.30 a. m.:

Mar. 15. Rev. E. N. Potter, D. D., President of Hobart College, Geneva, N. Y.

Mar. 22. Rev. W. L. Robbins, D. D., Dean of All Saints Cathedral, Albany, N. Y.

Seats are reserved for members of the University, all of whom are most cordially invited.

During Lent the St. Paul's Society holds daily evening prayer at 7 o'clock in 17 Grays. All students are cordially invited.

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 Renaissance.

Lectures on Oxford University.Joseph Wells, M. A., Fellow and Tutor of Wadham College, will deliver a lecture on "The Oxford of Today," on Thursday evening, March 26, at eight o'clock, in the Lecture Room of the Fogg Museum. The lecture will be open to the public.

Lectures on Greek Philosophy.On the invitation of the Classical Department, Professor Goodwin will deliver a course of five lectures upon Socrates, Plato and Aristotle and the Earlier Greek Philosophy, in the Lecture Room of the Fogg Museum, at eight o'clock on successive Friday and Wednesday evenings, beginning March 20.

March 20. The Earlier Greek Philosophy before Socrates.

March 25. Socrates and the Sophists.

March 27. Plato.

April 1. Plato (continued).

April 3. Aristotle.

The lectures are open to the public.

Harvard Memorial Society Lectures.The Harvard Memorial Society has arranged for the following evening lectures, to be given in Sanders Theatre:

Mar. 27. Harvard in the Fifties. President Charles W. Eliot '53.

April 3. Harvard in the Sixties. Hon. Moorfield Storey '66.

April 10. Harvard in the Seventies. Judge Robert Grant '73.

Seats on the floor and parts of the first balcony will be reserved for officers of the University, members of the Harvard Memorial Society and their friends. (Tickets for these reserved seats will be issued for the whole course of three lectures. Applications for these tickets should be made to A. M. Kales, 1256 Massachusetts avenue, on or before March 21).

On the afternoon before each lecture, between 4 and 6 o'clock, tickets admitting to the rest of the first balcony and to the second balcony will be given out at No. 3 Thayer Hall to students of the University. Five minutes before the lecture the public will be admitted.

Recommended Articles

Advertisement