Word: aid
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...freshman crew will need about $2,500 this year. This sum includes the expenses of training table here and at New London, a new shell and oars, uniforms. railroad fares, etc., etc. E. C. C. Cullinan, the newly-appointed manager, has appointed about fifteen assistants, and with the aid of these, a thorough canvass of the class will be made. Among these collectors are C. K. Cummings, Burgess, C. L. Barlow, C. W. Keyes, Hathaway, Brice, and W. C. Nichols. Every member of the class is urged to give to his utmost ability...
...year. One of the features of the new three year course is the establishment of an experimental moot-court. Dr. Dwight claims that the proposed innovation will make the work in the class room and that in the law offices contiguous. But to those who do not desire this aid, some other work will be assigned...
...these efforts we shall miss the aid and experience of the Ninety board. We know that we retain their sympathy, however, and shall try to earn as hearty congratulations from them, as we now extend to them for their successful administration of the CRIMSON...
...members of the faculty having each twenty-five men under their charge. This plan had worked so well in the case of special students that the faculty decided to apply it to freshmen as affording them great advantages and enabling them to settle upon their college work, with the aid of a competent advisor, sooner than they could otherwise have done. In the past it has been found that the examinations for admission, coming in the week college opened, have interfered very much with the prompt beginning of college work, and to obviate this, the examinations have been...
...absolute measure-of the magnetic susceptibilities of iron, nickel and cobalt; for his accurate measurement of fundamental physical constants; for the experimental proof of the electro-magnetic effect of electric connection; for the theory and construction of curved diffraction grating of very great dipersive power, and for the effectual aid which he has given to the progress of physics in America and other countries...