Word: contains
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...Views." During the past four or five years, however, and especially since the organization of the Undergraduate Schools Committee, matters have been greatly improved. In addition to the systematic distribution . . . . of all the regular college publications, a new plan is now on foot for editing a handbook which will contain concise information intended primarily for the benefit of Princeton sub-freshmen . . . . but also to arouse interest among men not strongly prejudiced in Princeton's favor. This work is being carried on entirely under the supervision of the Undergraduate Schools Committee...
...about 130 feet on Kirkland street and about 200 feet on Divinity avenue and Frisble place. The main entrance is from Kirkland street, opening into a lower vestibule, with office-rooms on each side. Beyond a small rotunda is the Romanesque Hall, about 70 feet long, which will contain, among other valuable parts of the collection, the collosal Bernward Column. From the farther end of the Romanesque Hall an entrance leads into the Gothic Hall...
...graduating class of the Harvard Dental School will issue this year for the first time a Class Album. The volume will contain class records and photographs of Dean Smith to whom the book is dedicated, President Eliot, and President Lowell. It will be bound in crimson leather and will have the Harvard seal on the cover. The committee in charge of publication are as follows: editor-in-chief, F. T. Hassett; business manager, N. E. Young; editors, T. J. Giblin, A. J. Gallagher, P. R. Manning, and H. F. Tufts...
...peculiar position in the national life, at least unusual to America, for there are several large newspapers in Germany which occupy a great educational position in the life of the country. These papers though not as widely circulated as some of our large papers, are splendidly edited and contain only news of real significance. The men in charge of them are scholars as well as newspaper men and succeed in printing papers which are really literary productions. The editorials on music and dramatic art are especially fine...
...take the latest Advocate as a fair example of the average issue of this fortnightly, it will be found to contain editorials, several short stories, an essay and three selections in verse. There is a family likeness, it is true, between this number and the many others that have gone before, but can so minor a fault repel the undergraduate? The editorials are interesting in that they reflect the student's opinion of his college world, Mr. Thwing's essay is a genial trifle, Mr. Hurst's and Mr. Peterson's stories meritorious though not distinguished; the poetry is worth...