Word: manner
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...conditions upon which Class Day tickets are sold and thus avoid the disagreeable misunderstandings which have occurred in other years. Class Day is an occasion for Harvard men and their friends and the promise not to sell or give tickets as fees should be observed in the same literal manner in which it is intended. Although we believe that most of the tickets which have been found in the hands of speculators and other undesirable persons in former years went astray through carelessness, fair warning to undergraduates and the unusual precautions of the Class Day Committee should prevent a recurrence...
...boat to the camp. Students who have make-up examinations may have them given at the camp. Upperclass men who have Class Day engagements may, by applying today, get leave to report on Saturday. They must conform to other requirements of registration: and upon arrival they must, in the manner provided, make up back work. All baggage must be checked by the owners. Those who purchase the special round-trip ticket can have their baggage checked through to the camp...
...courses in Boston for the year 1910-11. The courses which it is proposed to give are designed to benefit students who cannot attend college and will correspond as closely as possible with courses regularly given in the various institutions mentioned above. They will be conducted in the same manner and those taking a course will be required to do the same amount of work required of a regular college student. One great advantage of these courses is that they will be given by regular professors and instructors of the various institutions interested and no instructors will be employed...
...loan exhibition of Italian paintings have been replaced by a selection from the etched work of Rembrandt. The Rembrandt drawing which was purchased some months ago for the Museum is still to be seen in the print-room. The etchings shown with it illustrate Rembrandt's treatment of all manner of subjects, some mere sketches, others finished with studied care. They show his technique at different periods of his career, pure etching, dry-point used in connection with etching, and dry-point alone. Many of the impressions are very fine, enabling the student to appreciate this master as is possible...
...positions in the administrative departments of the University. His work has required a great deal of tact and patience and knowledge of the most varied sort. We feel that we express the feeling of the University in saying that he has done his work in a most thoroughly efficient manner...