Word: paper
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...University News, the daily paper of the University of Chicago, has now been firmly established as an undergraduate publication. Hitherto it has been published by an association of certain students and has not been recognized as the official organ of the undergraduates. The organization of the paper was changed a few days ago and at a meeting of the students of the university the paper was organized as the official publication of the undergraduates and a corps of editors was elected from them. As this now makes the paper a regular publication of undergraduate doings and sentiments it gives...
Owing to the late hour at which the B. A. A. handicaps of the Harvard men in the 40 yards dash reached Cambridge, the CRIMSON was unable to publish them in to-days paper...
...sincerely to be hoped, however that the time will come when work on college papers will be better recognized and appreciable credit given it. It is at least equal to an average course in the college curriculum, in the amount of time it requires and especially in the discipline and training derived from it. Just what form that credit should be is another question. But it is certain that the supplementary relation the work now bears to the academic courses is not sufficient. The training on a college paper certainly tends to develop a man's talents in a practical...
...recent action of the Princeton faculty in abolishing supervision of examinations and, instead, requesting students to sign a declaration at the end of their paper to the effect that they have neither given nor received assistance, has given rise to considerable discussion by the press of various colleges. While this regulation has a certain merit of appealing to the honesty of every man and of tending to raise the standard of honor, it may be doubted whether this mere signing of a pledge will make any material difference in the amount of cheating. A man is no more...
...rather rambling article on the conditions which surround a Florentine artist, a careful paper with which Frederic Crowninshield concludes his "Impressions of a Decorator in Rome," another instalment of Mrs. Burnett's "The one I knew best of all," two pieces of fiction "To her" and "How the Battle was Lost," and finally a pair of sonnets, make up the rest of this not very brilliant number...