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Word: students (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1890-1899
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Usage:

Registration and Residence -- Every student is required to register not later than 12 m. on the first week-day after the Christmas recess and the first weekday after the April recess. Continuous residence is required during term-time. No interruption of residence is permissible, except for satisfactory reasons stated to the Recorder (orally if possible) before the student leaves Cambridge. The students who has been absent must also report in person to the Recorder immediately on his return...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Christmas Recess | 12/6/1899 | See Source »

...expediency, there certainly is fully as much justification for such a committee as for the existence of a "Photograph Committee." The election of a promenade committee would enable the Seniors, as a class, to confer recognition on three more of those classmates, whose prominence in the widening range of student activity which has accompanied the growth of the classes, fully merits such recognition...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Communication. | 12/5/1899 | See Source »

...been computed that it would require 120 years for a bright student to take the courses offered in the Academic Department this year...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Fact and Rumor. | 12/5/1899 | See Source »

...this collection such books as were not already to be found on the shelves of the Harvard College Library, but the greater part of the collection remained in the hands of his heirs. This part consists of over seven hundred volumes, many of them of great interest to the student of Romance Languages, not only of course by reason of their intrinsic value, but also because they contain annotations by Professor Lowell which reflect his originality of criticism and thorough scholarship...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Lowell Memorial Library. | 12/5/1899 | See Source »

...appreciative account of the seriousness and levities of one University organization, complete the unusual articles of the magazine. Under the usual heading of the "The University," Professor Hart discusses the expansion of Harvard and the interesting academic and athletic situations, and F. E. Bissell '00 writes "Student Life." Athletics, Radcliffe, the departmental reports, graduate news, articles on the Harvard Numismatic collections and the Harvard Union, and the regular notes and records, with a view of Harvard College in 1795 as the frontispiece, complete the number...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE GRADUATES' MAGAZINE. | 12/4/1899 | See Source »

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