Word: reporter
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...Crandell, chairman of the senior class day committee, has made his report on the cap and gown question and circulars will be sent to the members of the senior class. The award of the contract for the manufacture of the gowns has been delayed owing to the negligence of several of the firms to whom the contract was offered. The cap and gown will be furnished by Cotrell, Leonard & Co., of Albany, N. Y. The Co-operative Society will act as their agents, and measurements may be taken there and the goods will be delivered when finished. The material...
...glad to hear from the class day committee on the subject of the cap and gown. It cannot be objected that the matter has not received careful enough attention for the committee have certainly been deliberate in awarding the contract. The report answers very satisfactorily a question which was raised when the subject was first discussed, the question of expense. It was urged that the cost of the caps and gowns would be far too great for the short time they were used. Fabulous figures of twenty or thirty dollars floated through the air, and an impression was cast abroad...
...make good this need each school should have a good library, containing an encyclopedia, physical and geographical atlases, geographical magazines and stories of travel prepared by travellers and not readers of travels. The teacher should give out subjects for the members of the class to look up and to report on to the rest of the class. In this way an interest in the subject is aroused which original investigation always adds. These exercises may be made useful as an exercise in English composition if the scholar is required to make a written report on his subject...
...undersigned, members of the faculty of arts and sciences of Harvard University, desire to signify our accord with the views expressed by the honorable secretary of the navy in his annual report for 1891, wherein he recommends the adoption of legislation to place the naval observatory at Washington under the direction of a competent practical astronomer...
...engage in it actively. A preliminary meeting was held before the mid-years to consider the advisability of forming such an association. At that time the subject was carefully discussed and a committee appointed to draw up a suitable constitution for the association. That committee will make its report tonight, and the final steps in the organization of the association will be taken. The movement is an important one for the Prospect Union, and all who have the interests of the Union at heart should attend the meeting...