Word: establish
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1890-1899
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...University of Pennsylvania will shortly establish a school of American history and institutions. There are to be eight courses...
...year, occurring in regular rotation and treating of subjects in religion. Justice Dudley was of an investigating turn of mind, more or less of a scientist and very much interested in all matters of theology. Being interested in Harvard College, he thought it would be a good thing to establish these lectures as regular institutions. In 1755, soon after his death, the first lecture was given, and they were kept up in the order prescribed in the bequest, till 1857, a period of over a century, when the fund became so low that it was decided to suspend the course...
...doubts to solve he should go to the meeting tonight and have them settled. The Athletic Committee gives evidence that it comes in the right spirit. It desires to stand in a clear light before the college, and this conference meeting is a step in an endeavor to establish a thorough understanding between the students and the committee. The students ought to be able to appreciate this spirit. If they participate in the conference in the same spirit the result will be all that can be desired...
...rules which the Senior Class Day Committee establish and enforce every year cover every point that is within their possible range. They have to leave the rest to the honesty and justice of the men themselves. When men prove that they have not these qualities the Class Day Committee is powerless. A case has come to our notice which illustrates the point. It is an instance where the Class Day Committee has no jurisdiction whatever, and where public feeling is the power to be brought to bear. The facts are simple enough. A man in the present senior class early...
...General Association of the students at Paris in the name of the association (a member of any of the higher institutions of learning is elligible to this association which now has nearly 4,000 members) adopted a series of resolutions to this effect: That every university ought to establish a committee of reception (Comite de Patronage) composed of friends of the university, with some representatives from the students themselves, similar to the committees already existing at Paris, Montpellier, in Sweden, and in Scotland. That when a student comes to any university with recommendations from a general association of students...