Word: professors
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...regular annual meeting of the Co-operative Society was held in Upper Dane last evening. Professor Cummings, president of the society, presented the annual report, and commented on the state of the Society's business, which exceeded by $8,000 that of the previous year. A constitutional amendment was adopted, providing that in case the society should ever be dissolved, its "inalienable" capital, now amounting to over $25,000, should be turned over, to the Corporation as a fund, the income to be used "for the embellishment of the College precints, or otherwise at their discretion in such manner...
...Professor Cummings and W. E. Weaver 2L., were re-elected president and secretary, respectively. The three undergraduate vacancies on the Board of Directors were filled by the election of W. Phillips '00, J. R. Locke '01, and B. Wendell, Jr., '02. The other five members of the Board are: From the Faculty, Professor Taussig; Medical School, Professor Mallory; Law School, R. C. Davis 3L.; Graduate School, C. H. Ayres 2G.; University at large, J. M. Boutwell, Assistant in the Scientific School...
...Twentieth Century Club's course of lectures on the theme of "Development of Educational Ideas and Institutions," two lectures will be given by Harvard professors. One will be delivered Feb. 24 by Professor Hanus on "Secondary Education and Its Development," and the other on March 8 by Professor Royce on "The Development of the Social Mind...
...Yeomans '00. The opening speeches will be twelve minutes in length and the rebuttal five minutes. The sides have been assigned as follows: Affirmative--Mayer, Kirtland and Yeomans; negative--Morse, Frank and Bruce. From these six, three men and an alternate will be selected for the final team. Professor Baker, Mr. I. L. Winter and Mr. R. C. Ringwalt, who will act as judges, will award the Coolidge prize of $100 to the man who has made the best speeches in the three trials...
...number of the Monthly which came out yesterday begins with a most interesting article by Professor Hollis on "The Moral Aspect of College Sports." "The politics, the heavy physical strain, and the distractions of certain sports seem to outweigh, in many minds," says Professor Hollis in this article, "the positive good that springs from them. This prejudice is, doubtless, based upon the abuses of ten or fifteen years back, when athletics had run mad. Things have changed, however, and the old influences have disappeared. Many practices once thought legitimate have been given up as leading to bad sport, and college...