Word: agreements
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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Fear has been expressed that the club agreement, printed in its final form this morning, will bring about a "tap day" in the University. But an examination of the agreement will show that there is little danger that prospective club members will have to line up in front of University Hall or anywhere else to be slapped fraternally on the shoulder by their brethren in the bond. Elections will proceed much as before; small groups of men will be taken into the clubs at intervals and without ostentation; there will be no hectic social Waterloo as at Yale...
...report for the past year explains two important changes in athletic government. One is an agreement between Harvard, Yale, and Princeton excluding coaches from the field when one of the teams named meets another. The second ruling concerns the writing of newspaper articles, signed and unsigned, by athletes. In both of the changes which he describes, Dean Briggs has been absolutely correct in theory; but in both he has met with opposition in practice from those undergraduates particularly interested. Yet once the new rules, which may gall a little now simply because they are new, have become firmly established through...
...other elements, notably copper, silver, iron, sodium, and chlorine, each of which seems to give a constant atomic weight, no matter what the geographical source may have been. No attempt is made here to discuss the theoretical aspects of the facts presented, but attention is called to their qualitative agreement with the hypothesis brought forward by Dr. Fajans and by Dr. Soddy, that some of the places in the periodic table, corresponding to high atomic weight should perhaps include several elements, different in atomic weights, but very similar in other properties...
...references on one aspect of the co-operation between the University and the Institute of Technology. The general account of the engineering courses offered by the University states that subjects required for degrees in engineering and mining, that are of a general nature and are not covered by the agreement for co-operation between the University and Technology may be taken either at Harvard or Technology...
Concerning the co-operative agreement itself, the new catalog has little to say. It states that "New students have been admitted during the current year with the expectation of profiting by the co-operation; and some of the University professors (seven) are giving instruction at Technology in addition to their work at Cambridge. The details for carrying out the co-operation are not entirely settled as the University Catalog goes to press. The plan, however, is that "students who enroll in these (the engineering) departments will be prospective candidates for degrees both from the University and from Technology, and upon...