Word: whose
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...vacancies to be filled on Commencement day, June 29, 1887, are five for the full term of six years, the place of Messrs E. E. Hale, E. R. Hoar, Morrill Wyman, Theodore Lyman and Francis C. Lowell, whose term of office expires on Commencement day. Messrs. Lyman and Lowell are eligible for re-election. Mr. Hoar declines to be a candidate for another term...
...like a myth when we realize that the undergraduates' favorite fancy is at last to be realized, and that Hemenway will be the only college gymnasium to have the luxury of a swimming-bath. The thanks of the University are due to the generous contributors to this project, without whose aid the new auxiliary to the gymnasium would be a thing of the distant future. Whatever may be said of "Harvard indifference" nevertheless the fact remains, that when any crying need is felt, Harvard's sons are always loyal...
...term - why, oh, why should this be? The editorial mind confesses to entertaining in its simplicity the opinion that undergraduates who finish their examinations earliest might better go home to loaf than make life doubly hideous with the revelry of their rejoicing for the unlucky wretch whose examinations are packed into the last few days...
...TAISMAN."Abbe Kakatoes, a saintly individual, whose emotions sometimes get the best...
...institution of learning is known as studium (sc., generale) Bononie. There were down to the 16th century two universities, those of Citramontani with 17 nations, and those of Ultra-Montani with 18 nations. At the head of each of these two universities there was a "rector," many of whose functions are exercised by the president of this university in historical succession. The English universities copied this institution from Paris, where it was an adaptation from the Bolognese model. The degrees given were principally those of Doctor of Laws (Civil Canon). The professors had formed a corporation (collegium) which...