Word: neighborhood
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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Most of the field work comes in Forestry 1, Forestry 6, and Forestry 7. In Forestry 1, which is the study of silvi-culture, excursions are made twice a week to tracts of forest in the neighborhood of Cambridge. In Forestry 6, the study of lumbering, each student is required during the winter term to visit and report upon a selected lumber camp. The field work in Forestry 7 includes reports upon special areas of forest, and in the spring term upon the construction of a working plan for a large tract of forest...
...teachers, chosen by Mr. S. N. Lindsay, commissioner of education in Porto Rico will be brought, to the United States this summer on transports by the War Department. Of these, nearly 300 will come to Harvard, arriving in Cambridge on July 2. Lodgings will be provided in the neighborhood of the College. President Eliot is now organizing the teaching staff, which will consist of about twelve persons, and also arranging the course of study to be pursued. The principal instruction will be in English, graded to meet the differences in the teachers' previous training. One quarter of the teachers will...
...University, and a recognized leader in the science of charity. The school is designed for advanced students, both men and women, who, having studied the principles of relief, wish to prepare themselves for professional or expert service by the closer study of specific problems and institutions. Boston and its neighborhood provide many resources for such clinical research. Women will register in Simmons College men in Harvard University, and admission to the school will be limited to those who are approved by the director. The new undertaking will thus represent and develop the new profession of social service, which...
...England--"Our Front Parlor Alligator," by Bradley Gilman '80; "A New Hampshire Log-Jam," by Walter Deane '70; "Neighborhood Sketches," by H. A. Shute...
...reason for this change is that with the great increase in the number of students during recent years the churches ministering liberally to their needs are no longer confined, as in former time, to those in the immediate neighborhood of the College at which pews have hitherto been rented. This fact and the largely increased expenditure for religious services within the University have induced the Corporation to withdraw their contributions to the pew rents in the above named six churches...