Word: print
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...chair. Reports of visiting committees were presented as follows, and referred to the committee on reports and resolutions: On the Divinity School, by the Rev. Dr. Hale; on the Observatory, by the Rev. Dr. Clarke. The committee on the observatory were authorized, if they think it expedient, to print their report in a daily paper. T. Jefferson Coolidge and Francis H. Peabody were added to the committee to visit the observatory. Bobert Grant was added to the committee to visit the library...
This pleasing and laughter-provoking sketch book of Harvard doings has, for more than a year, been out of print. During this time the demand for it has increased, and, to meet this demand, a new edition is now proposed, provided a sufficient number of copies is guaranteed. This book is a series of pictures of college life, and one, too, that is ever interesting to look over. The edition will be limited, and, in order to secure a copy of the work, it will be necessary to place your name upon the subscription list, which can be found...
...Princetonian will print the new foot-ball rules...
...convenient book for class day, which shows some enterprise, will be published Thursday afternoon by Moses King. It will be a neat pamphlet containing the class song with music, reduced from the HARVARD HERALD print by a photographic process: a view of Sever Hall, where the Pudding spreads: a view of Massachusetts Hall, where the Pi Eta spreads, and a view of the Gymnasium, where the dancing takes place in the evening. A new plan of the vicinity of the college has been made, showing by numbers and an alphabetical directory the location of all college buildings and noted buildings...
...custom then and it is now," says Dr. Greene, "for each student, on entering college, to have a copy of the laws, though now it is given to him in print. At that time, he was obliged to procure it for himself, and as paper was scarce, it is likely that the body of the pamphlet was sometimes handed down from one generation to another, and constituted a kind of transmittendum." This particular copy appears to have belonged to Jonathan Mitchell, a graduate of 1687, on his admission as a freshman...