Word: naming
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...University Catalogue is advertised a course, Six Plays of Shakspere, for undergraduates and graduates, by one of Harvard's distinguished scholars. The course has an enrollment of over a hundred men attracted by the study of the great poet, and the name of the lecturer. Unlike most of our large courses, English 2 has no section meetings, reports, or theses. The marks are therefore deduced entirely from examinations. Without stopping to criticize this scheme, a relic of an obsolete system of undergraduate instruction, the writer would call attention to the character of the mid-year examination recently given...
...have, I am sure, enough evidences of the evils of petty jealousies, and inane controversies concerning the different relationships that prevail at Harvard, without having an undergraduate trample the name of a Harvard institution in the dirt before the Boston public. Whether his statements are true or not, is not the question. But it rather seems to me that the general good of the University and the worthiness of its name should be more earnestly protected by all its members than to allow such an undignified statement to be made about any of its institutions. This is especially true...
...applications should be sent to the committee with the signatures of the members in sealed envelopes, on the outside of which some fictitious name should be written for identification, as well as the number of signatures the envelope contains; the order of preference, not of rooms, but of entries, and the number of rooms desired. Preference will be given in the assignments of Hollis and Stoughton to applications calling for three men in two rooms, over two men in two rooms, such combinations not being possible in Holworthy and Thayer. In stating a preference on the envelope, each group should...
...name appearing in more than one application will cause each group to be cast out. It is understood that by making an application a man pledges himself to abide by the allotment of the committee...
...card furnished by the instructor. For admission to all starred courses and courses "Primarily for Graduates" undergraduates must obtain the written consent of the instructors. This consent may be obtained on petition blanks which are first to be made out and approved at the Office. If, however, the name of the course was written in the list of studies handed in at the opening of the year, such written consent may be obtained on a car furnished by the instructor...