Word: publishes
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...twenty-first of October next, and at intervals of one month following thereupon, the undersigned purpose to publish a magazine, with the aim of furnishing a means by which the best literary work of the college may be put into permanent form. This magazine will be called "The Harvard Literary Monthly." For a long time the need of such a magazine has been evident. While each of the present college papers is excellent in its own field, that field is necessarily a circumscribed and limited one. With all the merits of the Lampoon, the Advocate and the CRIMSON, none...
...publish to-day an account of the Advisory Conference Committee which was first organized at Williams in the spring of 1884, for the purpose of set tling the difficulties which arose between the students and faculty concerning the cane rushes which at that time excited considerable comment in the press of the country. The object for which the Committee was called together was simply to settle this one question, but its action was so satisfactory, and conducive of such excellent results that it has since been made a permanent feature of the disciplinary system. The Committee consists of twelve student...
This will probably complete the series of articles on the experiments in cooperative college government which we announced some time ago as our intention to publish. We hope that these articles have been carefully read by the members of the faculty, as well as by the students, and that when the question of a conference committee for Harvard comes up before them for decision they will consider the success which has attended these attempts at student-government at other colleges, and therefore not hesitate to adopt the scheme which has been for some time under their consideration on the ground...
...publish to-day a very interesting and factions letter giving an account of the trials and tribulations of a West Point cadet, written by a-former member of the junior class at Harvard. The rigorous training of a cadet at a military academy is in sharp contrast to the freedom of action which is allowed at institutions of literary learning in this country, but undoubtedly the only way to make good and efficient army officers is to have the cadets subject to such severe discipline as gradually to accustom them to the hardships which they must endure in active service...
...short time ago we announced our intention to publish authoritative accounts of the experiments in co-operative government which have been made at several colleges. In the same issue we published a statement of the operation and success of the methods in vogue at Amherst; to-day an article on the "Jury System at Bowdoin" will be found on our front page...