Word: reporters
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...report that President Low of Columbia College had given Harvard College $60,000 is very likely not founded upon fact as nothing has yet been heard at the college office about such a gift...
...pass unnoticed; but the injury it does to the mass of the students is too great to be passively endured. It seems that some decided effort should be made to detect the offenders and make them pay a heavy penalty for their dishonorable abuse of privilege. Students should themselves report any cases that came to their notice to the Library officials Men in whom so little confidence can be placed, are hardly to be reached in any other way than through their fear of severe official punishment, and this they certainly merit...
...dual development of the graduate and undergraduate departments of Harvard is impossible. - (a) College and graduate school are essentially similar and continuous: Ed. Rev. VII, 313. - (1) Advanced and technical courses open to undergraduates. - (2) Difference in the college life of graduates and undergraduates less marked: President's Report...
...ROWE and W. L. VAN KLEECK.Best general references: J. B. Warner, in Harvard Grad. Mag., 2: 329 (March, 1894); Forum 13: 461 (June, 1892); C. W. Eliot et al. in Critic, 3: 152-154; C. W. Eliot, Annual Report...
...unnecessary. - (a) Highest education already accessible to women: C. W. Eliot, Annual Report, Jan. 1895. - (1) Radcliffe College supplies it to undergraduates. - (x) Instruction of same grade as at Harvard. - (y) Given by Harvard teachers. - (2) Harvard supplies it to graduates. - (x) Graduate courses open to Radcliffe. - (b) This plan is practicable and efficient. - (1) Objections to co-education eliminated. - (2) It has been adopted successfully elsewhere. - (v) Newnham College, at Cambridge, Eng. (w) Giston College, Oxford. - (x) Barnard College, Columbia. - (y) Western Reserve University...