Word: objections
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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Yale is determined to be ahead of Harvard in one particular at all hazards. Early in the term a meeting will be held by all the students to vote on the question of having morning chapel at 7.30 instead of 8.10 as hitherto. The object is that all the students may have two hours free from recitations in the afternoon. The faculty have agreed to make the change, provided the students determine upon...
...main object of all our examinations is to test individual proficiency with sufficient definiteness to enable the university to bestow its degrees and honors. Any such testing, however, must evidently be based on the character of individual work; otherwise it is not merely unjust, but it is a farce, pretending to represent what it really ignores. Now the character of individual work at Harvard varies with every man, and is resolvable only into the nature of the several courses he pursues. We must, therefore, lay down as a general rule for every examination, that it shall represent, in its method...
BOYLSTON CHEMICAL CLUB. - A Chemical Club with the above title has been organized by students of advanced courses in Chemistry. Their object is to aid each other in increasing their knowledge of Chemistry. Any student of Harvard University who has already taken a full course in Chemistry (at Harvard or elsewhere) is eligible for membership. H. E. L. Horton...
...CRIMSON board are all virtuosos. We are all fond of old china, of bric-a-brac, of everything quaint, curious and antique. We take delight in rare old editions of rare old books in rare old bindings. We even enjoy rare old jokes, and racy remarks. We do not object to having the Advocate and the Lampoon fling their merry jests at us, for they must fill up their columns, and their jocose sayings are not able to hurt. But we should urge a plea to the Lampoon to vary the style of its lively quip. In the last five...
...body to the greatest possible extent, succeeds in his work if he keeps his purpose clearly in view; and is very likely to fail if he does not. Men of natural ability often come to surpass their more talented class-mates because they are aiming at some definite object, they are more tenacious of purpose than those who, though more gifted, do their work in a careless, aimless way. - Amherst Student...