Word: statements
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...Dean of Harvard College or to the Dean of the College Faculty of the University of Pennsylvania. The essays are to be signed with a motto or an assumed name, and must be accompanied by a sealed envelope marked outside with the same motto or name, but enclosing a statement of the real name and academic standing of the author...
...writer of the communication in the CRIMSON of February 9, states that "when the Wendell Phillips Club started negotiations with Yale and Princeton, relative to intercollegiate debates, it invited the New Harvard Union to cooperate with it." This statement is misleading to say the least. The first three debates between Harvard and Yale were held between the Harvard and Yale Unions. The Wendell Phillips Club was at that time not in existence. The New Harvard Union is the direct descendant of the Harvard Union, and the men who formed it preferred to stay in the society rather than form...
...fund will run on for over four months, it will hardly pay to publish an account of it every morning. A statement will appear twice a week. The amount at present...
...will be issued in a day or two to graduates of the college in the last seven or eight years, inviting them to subscribe, and collectors will be sent around among the students that each man may have an opportunity of subscribing. At the same time a perfectly definite statement of the use to which the fund shall be put and of the persons who shall administer it, will be published. This, it is hoped, will bring the matter down from the air and put it on a firm business basis. We emphasize again the fact that...
Considerable space has recently been devoted by some of the daily papers, notbly the Philadelphia Ledger and the New York World, to statements in regard to the probable formation of a dual league in track athletics between Princeton and the University of Pennsylvania. Upon the authority of the officers of the Princeton Track Association, the statement is made that no communication whatever in regard to the matter has been received by them from the organization of U. of P., and that, so far as Princeton is concerned, the reports published in the daily papers are absolutely without foundation...