Word: scribner
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Prof. Bowen has written a work entitled, "A Layman's Study of the English Bible." It has just been issued from the press of Scribner...
...Departure in College Education" is the title of a pamphlet from the press of Scribner's Sons, New York, containing the reply of President McCosh to the views advanced by President Eliot at the recent meeting of the Nineteenth Century Club. The paper is ably written, and will, at a later date, be briefly reviewed in these columns...
...absolutely necessary expenses. What a student will actually spend, depends entirely upon himself. The limit might be placed at between $4,000 and $5,000 at Harvard, and much less at other colleges where the temptation to spend money is less. Mr. Thwing, in an article in Scribner's Monthly, several years ago, placed the average annual expenses of a student at the various colleges as follows: Harvard, $1,000; Yale, $1,000; Amherst, $700; Princeton, $600; Brown, Bowdoin or Williams, $500. While the average Yale man may not spend as much as the average Harvard man in entertainment...
...changes in the French courses we have already noted. Mr. Scribner's place will be occupied by Mr. cohn, who will conduct 1, 4, 6 and 10. The German courses remain practically the same, but will be somewhat differently conducted, as Profs. Shelden and Bartlett are the only instructors of the present year who will remain. The Spanish courses will be conducted by Prof. Nash; Prof. palmer returns to conduct his courses in Philosophy, and the Fine Arts courses will be crippled by the absence of Profit. Norton...
...number of "Scribner's Monthly" is a most interesting article on Recent Architecture in America, by Mrs. Van Rensselaer; and among the comparatively few public buildings praised and held up for imitation Harvard College has the honor of owning three, the Medical School, Sever Hall, and Austin Hall, the new Law School building. It is the belief of the authoress that these buildings are not to be praised so much for any peculiarity or eccentricity of style, nor yet for any particular beauty, but for the quiet and harmonious designs of the whole, and she maintains that the buildings look...