Word: centralized
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...latest movement in this scheme for central organization and support is the Harvard Training Association, the organization of which we give in another column. The plan upon which this association is to be run is admirable, and is bound to work well in practice. As a matter of fact, including what the men themselves pay, the yearly expenses for training table by three class crews, the freshman football, and the four 'varsity teams has been eleven thousand dollars. It is a question how much of this large sum has been pure profit divided among the boarding houses where the teams...
...revolutionary and socialistic in its tendencies; a. inaugurates government ownership of land; b. abolishes entire revenue system; c. gives too much power to central government...
...members. There are twenty-four organized classes in various branches conducted by instructors and students in the University. On Tuesday evenings there are lectures or discussions on scientific and economic subjects which are largely attended. The Union controls four rooms on the second floor of the Prospect House, near Central Square. Any Harvard man may become a member by the payment of twenty-five cents entrance fee and twenty-five cents per month, or a sustaining member may by paying five dollars a year. Application blanks for membership may be obtained of C. C. Closson, 19 Divinity, from half past...
...students at the Annex, Miss Annie P. Henchman, has just written an exceedingly scholarly paper on "Origin and Development of the Central Nervous System in Limax Maximus...
...evening President Eliot Spoke on "The Aims of the Higher Education" at Central Music Hall. The affair was a literary and social event, of which the patrons were, G. M. Pullman, N. Williams, E. W. Blatchford, N. K. Fairbank, J. Medill, F. Mac-Veagh, J. N. Jewett, A. C. McClurg, M. Field, C. H. Harrison, C. L. Hutchinson, M. J. Wentworth...