Word: reporter
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...report of the committee of arrangements was accepted, with the exception of the rule relating to the dropping of candidates after a certain number of ballots, which was expunged...
...commenting on the recent annual report of President Gilman of Johns Hopkins University, the Advertiser says: "The fact that the Baltimore experiment has had highly interesting and gratifying success, proves nothing against Cornell, Ann Arbor, Yale or Harvard, and the friends of Harvard in particular have good ground for maintaining that beside much else, there is attempted in Cambridge that very work which gives Johns Hopkins its distinctive character...
...Proceedings" of the fourteenth annual session of the American Philological Association, held in Cambridge last July, have just been published. Prof. C. R. Lanman is secretary of the society for the ensuing year. The pamphlet includes the reports of the secretary and the treasurer; the report of the committee (Prof. J. W. White, chairman,) appointed to consider measures for doing away with the granting of the degree Ph. D. honoris causa; synopses of the various papers read at the meeting, including one on "Semitic Personal Pronouns" by Prof. Troy of Harvard; and the annual address of the retiring president, Professor...
...charge of it. He obtained leave of absence for one year in order to assume charge of the school for that time. Next year a director from another college will take his place. It has been suggested that Yale will send a member of its faculty. Professor Goodwin's report of the opening of the school is expected at the meeting on Friday...
...very strong in regard to the uselessness of retaining the weaker members of the base - ball and foot - ball leagues in the two associations. Amherst and Dartmouth are not the most interesting opponents in base - ball, nor is Columbia a very formidable rival for the foot - ball championship. The report is that Harvard favors this movement. It would enable the nines of the four other colleges to play three instead of two games with each other. The great distance between Dartmouth at the north and Princeton in the south is one among the numerous arguments used. To us it seems...