Word: regarded
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...editorial in the last Advocate shows a misunderstanding of our position in regard to Honorable Mention. It required very little "reflection" to determine that twenty Themes and Forensics are not the same as eight hours of elective work for one year. The point which we endeavored to make was that the requirements for Honorable Mention, as such, should be the same for all subjects. On this basis, it is reasonable that the requirement in English composition should be 80 per-cent for all the work that comes under that head, even though it is not equivalent to eight hours...
...title to the championship there are no agreements and conditions; and Yale has challenged Princeton, and Princeton has refused the challenge, thus forfeiting the title which would be hers if we granted that the championship is determined by the rules which the Advocate applies. Thus, in whichever way we regard the question, the conclusion is inevitable that Yale and Princeton are tied...
NOTWITHSTANDING what has been said in the College papers concerning the low, despicable advantage which some students have taken with regard to the privilege the Library has extended us in the use of reserved books, the evil still continues. Not only are reserved books hidden in various parts of the Library, so that no one can find them except the one who hid them for his own selfish purpose, but also books are constantly missing from the shelves and can be found nowhere in the Library, the supposition naturally being that some student has secretly carried off the book...
...students, accordingly, should not be put to inconvenience by outsiders. The mere question of convenience can easily be settled, it would seem, by transferring the course to Sever, or to some room where there are tables for the eight men who regularly elect the course, to write at. But regarding the tendency towards co-education, which the writer traces from allowing women to go to the evening readings, and permitting them to attend these lectures, we think that he overestimates the concessions made by the College. Is it not more probable that in the cases mentioned, and in allowing ladies...
...editorial and article in the Advocate, adverse to the Crimson's position in regard to Freshman races, call for further remarks on the subject...