Word: planning
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...discussed at a meeting in Sever 11 this evening. All who are interested in the study of French literature should make it a point to attend this meeting; for unless sufficient enthusiasm is manifested by the students, it will be impossible to carry out the proposed plan. As a pleasant and profitable manner of studying subjects in French literature and in French history, and of acquiring an ability to converse in French and to readily understand the language when spoken, the proposed society would be invaluable. As we understand it, the society will not confine it self to the consideration...
...Glee Club concert of last Friday revived old memories and feelings, and with them the memory of a plan, not new, but one which may be made new by its extension to a yet wider scale than was at first intended. We speak of class Glee Clubs. That such clubs could exist has been shown by the freshman Glee Clubs of the last two years. The University Glee Club draws but five men on an average from each class; surely, there would be enough vocal material left in the class to form a tolerable class Glee Club. A moderately good...
...morrow's issue, a plan of the work in elocution with Mr. Hayes will be published. The instructor will not be in Holden Chapel again until he meets classes there...
...believed that by a journal on this plan, combining some of the advantages of the review, the monograph, and the magazine, much valuable work which is now lost for the want of a proper medium may be brought together and saved, a stimulus may be given to scholarly research and discussion, and important assistance afforded to those who are interested in the solution of the great economic, financial and social questions of the day. And with this belief your co-operation and support are invited with confident hope...
...facts collected by the Conference Committee last spring. All the prominent colleges of the United States were requested to send in a statement of their methods of marking and ranking the students. After a no doubt very careful consideration of all these facts the faculty decided on the plan which was published in the columns of the daily press. This notice was necessarily vague and did not give any of the details which it could only interest the Harvard undergraduate to know. The students have in consequence no exact knowledge of the nature of the new system, and much speculation...