Word: within
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...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 examinations." Examinations Today. Architecture 3a, Robinson Hall. Architecture 3b, Robinson Hall. Architecture 3c, Robinson Hall. Botany 3b, Pierce 202. Class. Philol. 69, Sever 18. Economics 25, Lower Mass. Engineering 16d, Pierce 202. English 14, Sever 18. French 5, Sever 23. German F, Harvard 5. German G, Harvard 5. German H, Harvard 5. Government 15, Holdem. Government 16, Lower Mass. Latin 3, Upper Mass. Latin...
...Buddhist doctrine is this,--that a man consists of states of consciousness; and in the persistence of these states the question of man's immortality is bound up. States of consciousness are divisible into two classes: those that originate from without and those that originate from within. The first are conditioned by time and space, the latter are not. A state of consciousness may originate through the senses, by the will, or spontaneously...
...class may be made by petition of fifty members of that class. Such petitions must reach the nominating committee before 6 P. M. of Friday of that week. (4) Each class shall elect two delegates on or before the second Monday after the opening of College. (5) Within forty-eight hours of the election of the above delegates the temporary chairman shall convene the Council, at which meeting the annual election of officers shall take place. Also at this meeting the three representatives from the College at large shall be elected. (6) No undergraduate who is not in good standing...
...student who is not in the examination room within five minutes after the hour appointed for the examination shall not be admitted without express permission of the instructor of the officer in general charge of the examinations...
Social life at the University is within reach of all: The clubs for men of larger means, the common-rooms of the College dormitories and the Union for those of smaller means. For the former class, their club-mates. For the former class, their club-mates and their surroundings in the private dormitories are refining influences, and although a poor man may work his way through College, he is thought none the less a man. The craze for being the social equals of wealthy men, in contrast to Europe, does not exist among the poorer men in the American University...