Word: planning
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...third meeting on Saturday was atteaded by the usual crowd of spectators. A new arrangement placed all the ladies at the east end of the building and it seemed as if there were more of the fair sex present then ever before. The new plan of seating seemed to be better than that hither to practised. The officers of the meeting were: referee, Dr. D. A. Sargent; judges, Prof. Byerly and Mr. I. Tucker Burr, '79: officer in charge, W. H. Goodwin, Jr., '84. Mr. Coolidge, the president of the association presided. Towards the close of the meeting...
...recent Williams College troubles have waked the college up to the conclusion that such occurrences cannot be stopped in the old way. Experience has shown that, however many students are expelled or suspended one year, the same disturbances happen the next. SO a new plan is to be tried. Committees have, at the suggestion of the faculty been appointed in each class by its members, which committees are to confer with the faculty in regard to the internal management of the college. In this way the sentiment of the classes will be made known to the faculty, and vice versa...
JUNIOR THEMES.Advanced section.-Mr. Wendell will meet the Advanced Section in Sever 5 on Tuesday, April 1, at 2 o'clock, to consider a plan of work for the rest of the year...
...offer this plan, fully convinced that the present one is radically wrong, and that this year the injustice will be greater than ever before, owing to the small number of the courts. A system so absurdly unjust as the present one must go some time, and the present is the best time to do away with it without injustice...
...called upon to choose the "immortal forty." The correspondent of the Critic seems to be carrying on the enterprise alone. and so far as the present writer knows, has not been questioned as to the form or limits of the proposed Academy. All we know of the plan is that forty living men of letters are required. That America will have an Academy of men of letters in the near future can hardly be doubted. It ought to be a subject of great interest to all intelligent people, and especially to Harvard men; because when the Academy is once founded...