March 7. Saturday.Harvard Teachers Association. Fifth Annual Meeting. A Wider Range of Electives in College Admission Requirements. President Eliot, Mr. C. H. Grandgent, and Mr. J. Y. Bergen, Jr. Sever 11, 9.30 a. m.
Open to the public.
8. Sunday.Appleton Chapel, 7.30 p. m. Bishop John H. Vincent, of Topeka, Kansas.
Week-day morning prayers begin at 8.45 a. m. No seats are reserved.
Bishop John H. Vincent will conduct prayers from March 9 to March 13.
The preacher conducting prayers may be found at Wadsworth House 1 every week-day during his term of service.
Bishop Vincent may be found at Wadsworth House 1 daily from 9 to 11.
9. Monday.President and Fellows of Harvard College. Adjourned meeting at No. 50 State street, Boston, 10.15 a. m.
Seminary of American History and Institutions. The Bishop of London's Jurisdiction over the Colonies. Mr. A. L. Cross. University 20, 3.30 p. m.
Seminary of Economics. The International Trade of the United States in its Relation to Recent Currency Legislation. Mr. A. Sweezey. University 23, 4.30 p. m.
Physical Colloquium. Discussion of Recent Papers in the "Annalen der Physik." Jefferson Physical Laboratory, Room 24, 5 p. m.
Harvard Religious Union. Weekly Meeting and Discussion. Subject: John Morley and Intellectual Honesty. Parlors of the First Parish Church, 6.45 p. m.
Open to all members of the University.
Exhibition of Lantern Slides. III. Illustrating the Fine Arts of the Middle Ages. Professor Moore. Lecture Room of the Fogg Museum, 8 p. m.
Open to the public.
Botanical Club. Paper: On the Occurrence of Oils in Plants. Mr. W. S. Rich. University Museum, Room 12, 7.30 p. m.
Open to all members of the University.
10. Tuesday.Faculty of Arts and Sciences. Meeting at University 5, 4 p. m.
Seminary of Classical Philology. Open Meeting. On Certain Forms of the Conditional Sentence in Plautus. Mr. B. O. Foster, Sever 13, 2.30 p. m.
Open to all students of Classics
Commencement Parts. Seniors entitled to Commencement Parts, whether under the provisional assignment or on the ground of honorable mention, will meet Professor A. S. Hill in Sever 1, at 3.30 p. m.
Freshman Debating Club. Debate. University 16, 7 p. m.
Question: "Resolved, That the United States Navy should be further increased."
Principal disputants.- Affirmative: F. J. Snite and G. R. Stobbs.- Negative: W. C. Gerrish and B. W. Currie.
All freshmen are cordially invited.
Geological Conference. Papers: An Elementary Demonstration of the Tides. Professor Davis.- Tidal Scour. Mr. F. P. Gulliver. Geological Laboratory, Room 2, M. Z., 7.45 p. m.
Open to all members of the University.
Lecture. The Guiana Boundary Question. Professor Macvane. Lecture Room of the Fogg Art Museum, 7.45 p. m.
Open to the public.
Lecture. The Art of Letter-writing, and the Letters of Matthew Arnold, Coleridge, Fitzgerald, Flaubert, and Stevenson. Mr. Copeland. Sever 11, 8 p. m.
Open to all members of the University.
Christian Association. Reception to Students. Holden Chapel, 8 p. m.
Open to all members of the University. Several men interested in Northfield work will speak.
Sanskrit Conference. The Epics and the Drama. Professor Lanman, 9 Farrar St., 9 p. m.
11. Wednesday.Pedagogical Seminary. A Graded Course in Manual Training. Preliminary Paper. Mr. W. A. Baldwin. Sever 8, 4.30 p. m.
Open to all graduate students.
Divinity School. Conference. Divinity Chapel, 4.30 p. m.
Cercle Francais. The Work of the French Assyriologists. (Illustrated.) Professor Lyon. Lecture Room of the Fogg Museum, 8 p. m.
Open to the public.
12. Thursday.English 6. Oral Debate. Harvard 1, 3.30 p. m.
Question: "Resolved, That biennial elections should be adopted in Massachusetts."
Principal Disputants.- Affirmative: A. S. Ingalls and F. H. Smith, Jr.- Negative: H. F. Knight and T. H. Russell.
Open to all members of the University.
Vesper Service. Appleton Chapel, 5 p. m.
Christian Association. Regular Monthly Missionary Meeting. The Importance to the Christian Student of a Knowledge of Non-Christian Faiths. Holden Chapel, 6.30 p. m.
Open to the public.
Symphony Orchestra Concert. Sanders Theatre, 7.45 p. m.
Lecture. What Harvard has done for Physical Education. Dr. D. A. Sargent. Lecture Room of the Fogg Museum, 8 p. m.
Open to the public.
13. Friday.The College Debating Club. Debate. Sever 5, 3.30 p. m.
Question: "Resolved. That the abolition of the death penalty would be for the interest of humanity."
Principal speakers will be criticised by Mr. Copeland. Mombers of the University are invited to be present and to speak.
Assyrian Readings. IV. Marduk and the Dragon. Professor Lyon. Lecture Room of the Fogg Museum, 4 p. m.
Open to the public.
Divinity School. Preaching Service. Mr. R. W. Stimson. Divinity Chapel, 7.30 p. m.
Open to the public.
Graduate Club. The Present State and Prospects of Psychology. President G. Stanley Hall of Clark University. Colonial Club House, 8 p. m.
Open only to members and to invited guests.
Princeton-Harvard Debate. Sanders Theatre, 8 p. m.
Subject: "Resolved, That Congress should take immediate steps for the complete retirement of all legal tender notes."
Open to the public, upon the payment of fifty cents each.
Sale of tickets will be announced later.
Appleton Chapel-Sunday Evenings.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.
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, 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. 13.- Marduk and the Dragon. A Babylonian Cosmogonic Myth.
Mar. 20.- Selections from an Assyrian Book of Prayers.
Lectures on Literature.The subjects and dates of Mr. Copeland's remaining lectures are as follows:
Mar. 10. The Art of Letter-Writing, and the Letters of Matthew Arnold, Coleridge, Fitzgerald, Flaubert, and Stevenson.
Mar. 17. Keats.
Mar. 27. Robert Burns.
Mar. 31. The Short Story.
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