Word: worded
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...custom at the opening of the season, the service will be almost entirely musical. The choir of St. Paul's Church, Boston, will assist the chapel choir in rendering Garrett's Harvest Cantata. To all students who have been in the University before this year these services need no word of comment. To new comers among us it may be interesting to know that the services are held every Thursday during term time through the winter. They are purposely made short and simple in character and are not intended to be strict services of worship, but rather to serve...
...than it could possibly be as a college by itself. Both institutions may congratulate themselves on the new relations. We feel sure that the final adjustment of this matter will meet with the hearty approval of members of the University; though co-education in the popular sense of the word will not exist here, under the new arrangement the higher education of young women will be brought much nearer to that of young men and given the place that fairmindedness must admit that it deserves...
Several of the prose articles deserve more notice than it is possible to give them here. The "Paper" Sport is as good a "Harvard Type" as the Advocate has yet introduced; and the "Law Breaker," which follows, contains some uncommonly vivid word painting. Its author, Philip Richards, gives an excellent description of the novel feelings which the hero experiences on his first introduction to a gambling hell. In marked contrast are "Merely Players," and "Applied Science," the articles already indefinitely referred to as lacking in originality...
Because a paper is occasionally called upon to deal harshly with college organizations college men are apt to think that adverse criticism is its typical mood; yet where a paper has "justice" for its by word it must sometimes deal thus harshly or it fails in its mission. In this spirit of justice we feel ourselves right in criticising adversely the work of the freshman eleven. It is an old story-and only the worse for its age. To begin with, the freshmen have little or no discipline in their work and right here is the basis of the other...
ENGLISH A.- Lists of the sections in English A are posted in University. Men whose names are not on the lists, and men who are assigned to sections which they cannot attend, should send word, in writing, at once, to B. S. Hurlbut, 21 Hollis Hall, stating what sections they can attend...