Word: currents
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...Advocate grinders cease because they are few, or is there some cogent reason why the current issue is so destitute of contents? Besides the editorials and book review but five small contributions in verse and one in prose make up the number, which is meagre indeed when one recalls past Advocates of five and six pieces and thirteen or fourteen contributions in verse. However, it is not of quantity that we ought to judge, or are to judge, but of quality,--quantum meruit...
...classroom work in all courses given by the Faculty of Arts and Sciences for the first semester of the current year will end today. The mid-year examinations will start tomorrow and continue through February 10. As usual all tests will begin promptly at 9.15 o'clock, lasting for three hours. Following is a complete list of the examinations held tomorrow with the places assigned to each: Anthropology 14 Peabody Mus. Astronomy 1 Harvard 5 Chemistry 6 Sever 5 English 24 Bailey to Oakes Sever 17 Perham to White Sever 18 Fine Arts 3a Robinson 1 fl Fine Arts...
...University reception for the current academic year will be held in the Union on Wednesday evening, January...
...state that the article in question contains the first news that the Yale rowing authorities have had of the Yale rowing authorities have had of the proposed change. But the Times does not rest content with its Sunday article. In the Monday edition, under the heading of 'Comment on Current Events in Sport,' we come upon an item on the same subject wherein we find the following paragraphs: 'Yale and Harvard have each appealed to the other to shorten the New London Classic; and now rowing followers explain Yale's new tack by pointing to the fact that Eli crews...
...Harvard-Yale and Poughkeepsie races were inaugurated in imitation of the Oxford-Cambridge race of somewhat over four miles on a fast current. We have at most of our rowing colleges, been for years rowing a distance which seems unsuited to our climatic conditions, our natural physiological temperament, and to the local conditions prevailing at most of our rowing colleges, merely because under entirely different circumstances, Englishmen have developed a four-mile tradition...