Word: likeness
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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EDITORS DAILY CRIMSON. - I should like to call attention to the preparation for examination in French I. We have already had all the work we can do for the daily recitations. Now we are pleased to learn that in addition to grinding up all we have read in class, we are to have forty or fifty pages extra, which we have had no time to go over with the instructor. It is asking too much...
...larger recitation and lecture rooms. Now, as every student is well aware from long experience, recitation rooms with us are little nitches cut out of an ideal paradise. This being the case, especially with those in Massachusetts and Harvard Hall, the question arises, why should the seats be like smaller nitches cut out of an ideal - something else. Consistency is known to be a jewel, and here is a source of unbounded wealth for our faculty...
...promenading. Limit yourselves to your beats as we are limited to our seats, and depend more on vigilance of eye than on pedestrian awfulness. Do not continually pass between us and the windows; and please, please, sweet proctors, hang over our shoulders as little as possible. Don't stand, like the Devil, behind our backs, but pose in the foreground that we may be constantly encouraged by your inspiring presence...
...works hard over his English, and is supposed to have literary ability, is not deemed a grind, in just the same way that a great classical or mathematical scholar is. He who writes for the college papers gets a popularity, small to be sure, but in kind, somewhat like that of the athlete. It is, in a certain degree, a credit to the class. Accordingly, many who cannot distinguish themselves in athletics, are beginning to look upon a place on an editorial board as a good way to become favorably known in college...
Wanted. - A young man desirous of finishing his education would like the services of an instructor. Address, Samuel J. Jones, Cambridgeport...