Word: currently
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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EDITORS DAILY CRIMSON: Allow me to make public through your columns, a few facts in regard to the foot-ball controversy with Williams which your correspondent appears to have forgotten and which may justify the management in allowing current reports to stand...
...years from September 1, 1887; Frederick I. Knight, assistant professor of laryngology, for five years from September 1, 1887; Harold N. Fowler, instructor in Latin and Greek archaeology, for 1887 and 1888, William H. Potter, A. B. D., M. D., demonstrator of operative dentistry for the remainder of the current academic year; William A. Gardner, A. B., instructor in Greek from the April recess to the end of the current academic year; also in the election of John H. Wright as professor of Greek, to serve from September...
...current number of "Outing" is one of the best we have seen. The articles all have real interest in them, besides much information. In addition to the regular serials, "After Geronimo" and "Around the World on a Bicycle," there are a large number of short interesting articles. Among these a personal account of "The Carnival at Cologne" is perhaps most interesting because of its novelty. "Electric Time," "Travels on next to Nothing," "A Tramp Trip to Europe," and an article on "The New Playing Rules of Base-Ball" are full of valuable information. The rest of the number contains "Coursing...
...pendant to Mr. Wendell's article on "Social Lite at Harvard" there appears in the current number of "Lippincott's Magazine" an admirable essay on "Social Life at Princeton," written by E. M. Hopkins, '88, of that college. Though the individual features of college life may vary quite considerably in the Eastern colleges, it is noticeable that there is but little fluctuation in the broader lines. Men are the same all the world over, and why should we expect the students of one college to be afflicted with greater sins or gifted with greater virtues than those of another...
EDITORS DAILY CRIMSON: The library authorities are so careful to secure the best current magazines for the reading-room, that a complaint in this direction almost needs an apology accompanying it. But it seems to me, that an oversight has been made in their failure to provide a copy of the "Forum," a new but excellent magazine, with a list of contributors of high repute. Several persons have suggested, according to the regulation, that this periodical be put on the shelves, but, for some reason best known to the authorities themselves, their suggestions have as yet been unheeded...