Word: professor
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...outrage and still call us children. Considering the character of the trick, I cannot imagine that it should have been conceived in any spirit but that of harmless fun-a spirit which seldom enough gets the better of our dignity. If an insult were intended to Professor Wendell surely something would have been done which would have left us in no doubt as to the intention. As to the insult to the class suggested by the writer in Wednesday's CRIMSON, I think the laughter at the time of the interruption to the lecture puts that well out of question...
Harvard's delegates to the committee for the conference on athletics to be held at Providence by the Eastern universities are to be: Professor I. N. Hollis, F. W. Moore '93, E. G. Burgess '98. The conference will be held at the invitation of Brown University, and Pennsylvania, Columbia, Cornell, and probably Yale and Princeton will send delegates. The conference, as has already been stated, will have no binding effect on the universities represented, but the opinions expressed and the general conclusions reached will, it is hoped, react in favor of a uniformity of regulations governing college athletics...
General Bancroft also read a letter from Professor I. N. Hollis, as chairman of the Athletic Committee, endorsing the new movement and wishing the organization every possible success...
During the mid-year period, the regular consultation hours will be omitted, except that Professor Baker will be in Sever 10 today, (Thursday), from 11-12, and thereafter regularly on each Tuesday until the opening of the second half-year. All conference hours will then be kept...
President Ely has in preparation a pamphlet which will give a complete account of the history of the Union with a statement of its principles and methods. There will be four leading articles on the following subjects: "The Origin of the Union." by Professor Peabody; "The Union and the University," by G. L. Paine '96; "The Union and the Workingman," by James A. Stinson of the Riverside Press, and "The Principles and Methods of the Union," by President Ely. The publication, which is about forty pages long, will also contain pictures of officers and teachers and exterior and interior views...