Word: plans
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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Princeton has submitted the following question for the debate with Harvard which will occur at Princeton on March 28: "Resolved, That the free elective system is the best available plan for the undergraduate course of study." The choice of sides rests with Harvard. It will be decided after the last trial...
...fulfillment of the plan agreed upon by. Harvard and the Prussian Ministry of Education, Professor E. G. Peabody '69, Dean of the Faculty of Divinity, Plummer Professor of Christian Morals, and Chairman of the Board of Preachers to the University, has been designated as the Harvard lecturer at the University of Berlin in the first half of the next academic year. Professor Peabody was selected by the University of Berlin from a list of professors available for such service which was furnished to the Rector of the University of Berlin. Professor Peabody's lectures will be on the subject dealt...
...what Harvard is now doing in applied science, however, President Eliot makes it apparent that Harvard has no intention whatever of abandoning that field of education; and the inference may be drawn that, whatever the outcome of the negotiations with the Institute may be, Harvard will adopt no plan which can be construed as anything but a larger and better provision for the fulfillment of her present truest...
When a young lawyer comes into court to open a case, he should guard against self-consciousness and be free from affectations. His utterances should be simple and concise; his manner of speaking and even his dress, unnoticeable. The mistake most frequently made by beginners is a failure to plan the proportions of speeches in court, so that bad results are effected under the one-hour limit rule. Selecting from a mass of evidence the one or two vital points upon which the case will turn is as important in trials as strategy in a battle. Generally the most effective...
...especial attempt has been made to place the social clubs of the University in their true light before the undergraduates. To further this plan it is desired that some of the more prominent clubs, which have not as yet sent to the editor a list of members or statement in regard to classes from which their members are chosen, should do so at once...