Word: students
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...raised $800 annually for the support of E. C. Carter '00 in India, and has helped in placing some ten other men in missionary work in foreign countries. Now that Mr. Carter has returned to this country to be in charge of the Y. M. C. A. student department in the United States, the mission will turn its energies to new work. Plans have been nearly completed for a new undertaking. It is expected that in May Mr. Jacob Riis will give a lecture in the Union on the present condition of the slums in New York, in order...
Regulations: "No student is permitted to take any books or papers into the examination room except by express direction of the instructor. No communication is permitted between students in the examination room on any subject whatever...
...student who is not in the examination room within five minutes after the hour appointed for the examination shall not be admitted without permission of the instructor or of the officer in general charge of the examinations." Thursday, January 28. (XIV) Architecture 3a, Robinson Architecture 3b, Robinson Architecture 3c, Robinson Architecture 3d, Robinson Architecture 6, Robinson Economics 9a, Harvard 5, 6 Economics 14a, Fogg Lecture Room French 3, Lawrence 1 Government 23, Harvard 6 Mining 19, Rotch Music 1, Upper Dane Philosophy A, Upper and Lower Mass. Philosophy 15, Lawrence 1 Spanish 17, Harvard 5 Friday, January 29. (II) Anthropology...
...seemed strange to some that the student body has not taken a more interested part in the discussion relating to a successor. Some would even have the undergraduates make public their choice and give the Corporation the benefit of their decision. The CRIMSON feels that there might well be more thought and discussion given to the matter by the undergraduates. It is a topic which has a vital bearing on them, not only while they are still in the University, but more particularly after they have graduated and are viewing the affairs of Harvard from the standpoint of an alumnus...
...killed at Cedar Mountain. Edward Dalton '55 died of exhaustion after the war. James Lowell '58 was shot once and returned to the North; later he went back to the front and was killed at Glendale. Stephen Perkins '56 was pleasant and witty, a brilliant student, standing at the head of his class in College. He was shot in the battle of Cedar Mountain. Robert Shaw '60 was given command of the first black regiment, the success of which was largely due to his energy and ability. He was killed in the battle of Fort Wagner and was buried with...