Word: print
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...print in another column a letter which advocates making some use of the old gymnasium. To many students it has seemed to be a pity that a building of such size should be solely devoted to the humble purposes of the college carpenter shop. It is situated so near to Memorial and close to the yard that it is no wonder that such men have constantly turned a longing eye towards it in hopes that it might some day be at least more useful if not more ornamental. The idea of making the building into several rooms is a good...
...recent anniversary of Johns Hopkins University, one of the chief features of the day was an address by Pres. Eliot. A full report of the address has not yet been printed. We print below an abstract of President Eliot's remarks. The subject of the address was "The Degree of Bachelor of Arts as an Evidence of Liberal Education," and its object was to advance that educational reform now in progress whereby the circle of "liberal studies" is to be widened so as to include, besides the Latin, Greek and mathematics, which were the staples of the sixteenth century curriculum...
...petition which we print in our supplement represents fairly, we think, the vies taken of the recent athletic regulations by the majority of our undergraduates. It has, however, seemed best to lay the matter before the entire student body, for final action; and for this purpose a mass meeting of the students has been called by the authors of the petition for next Monday evening. There is, of course, no need to point out the importance of a full attendance at this meeting. If the petition is to have any weight at all, it will be because it voices...
...shall not print this editorial again for at least two weeks...
...instructors, has been noticed by us before. Instructors should recollect the large expenses attending the term of study at Harvard, and should aim to reduce rather than add to these expenses. It seems strange that an instructor should not be able to tell whether or not the "print is too fine" or "the German too simple" for the men in his course before selecting the book. To be compelled to buy a book, merely to throw it aside in a week or more for some trivial reason, is very disagreeable...