Word: paragraphs
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...nomination papers for the Class Day election will be found below. The names of nominees are given in capitals, at the beginning of each paragraph, and the names of the nominators follow in each case...
...tuition, cost of text books, room rent and reasonable board of such descendants of David and Beulah Ellis, and John and Hannah Ellis as are students in Harvard College. Any remaining income is to be used for the general purposes of the College. In another paragraph of the will, the residue of the estate is given to the President and Fellows. The income from this is to be used for increasing the salaries of three professors in the Medical School until those salaries, from other gifts and sources as well as this, amount to $5000 each. Any surplus income, after...
...maintained, and after this promising beginning the story declines unaccountably but yet perceptibly toward the common-place. The description of DaVinci's "La Gioconda by W. C. Arensberg 1900, is a remarkably subtle and sure bit of analytic character drawing. In spite of its inverted sentences a "Paragraph from Hawailan History," by W. R. Castle 1900, is readable and very interesting. Other contributions in the number are "A Comedy of Errors," by J. G. Forbes 1901, and "My Complication with the Major" by P. G. Carleton '99. This last is the only undergraduate contribution in the number which deals with...
...Kipling by W. Nicholson, a poem by James Lane Allen, and twenty pages of interesting literary gossip. There are also articles on miscellaneous literary subjects, London and Paris letters, reviews of new books, and chapters of a serial story. A portrait of C. M. Flandrau is accompanied by a paragraph, which says: "Harvard Episodes is not to be hastily ranked with the college story-book, which, so curiously amusing to insiders, is as curiously deceptive to outsiders...
...reading of "Graduates" communication in yesterday's CRIMSON, one concludes, I think, that the gentleman has the proper spirit, and that he has the courage of his convictions-whatever they are. One also finds himself wondering what connection there is between the first and last halves of the first paragraph. The paragraph runs: "Tradition says there shall be nominating speeches in the elections for Class Day officers, and it is high time that a precedent be established abolishing printed slates or any other machinery designed to prevent open contests and free choice." Well and good. But what has this last...