Word: latinized
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Latin...
Beginning with this year, Greek will no longer be required for entrance to the Bachelor of Arts course, and Latin will not be required of S.B. students in case they offer added requirements in mathematics and modern languages. This does not mean that Princeton's former policy of the encouragement of the course in the classics will be in any way slighted, for opportunities for advanced work in that field will still be offered to undergraduates...
Hereafter, Latin will be the only absolute requirement for freshmen who are taking the A.B. course, while mathematics will be substituted for it by those men who are planning to receive the S.B. The choice of two of the following subjects remains for those trying for the degree of A.B.: English, foreign language, mathematics and science. Two other subjects are also to be chosen from a list of twelve...
...Sophomore year, Latin is not required for any degree, and there is a wider choice of electives. In the upper class program, the old system of departments has been partially abolished. Three divisions have been substituted instead, and a man must take three courses in his division...
...Fine Arts; George David Birkoff '05, Professor of Mathematics; Chester Noyes Greenough '98, member of the Administrative Board of Harvard College; Edwin Crawford Kemball, Instructor in Physics; Guillermo Rivera '09, Instructor in Spanish; Richmond Laurin Hawkins '03, Assistant Professor of French; Julius Klein G.'13, Assistant Professor of Latin-American History and Economics; Louis Joseph Alexander Mercier, Assistant Professor of French; George Benson Weston '97, Assistant Professor of Romance Languages; Roland Thaxter '82, Professor Emeritus of Cryptogamic Botany; Chester Laurens Dawes, Assistant Professor of Electrical Engineering; William Casper Graustein '10, Assistant Professor of Mathematics; Lincoln Ware Riddle '02, Assistant Professor...