Word: doubtless
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Boston University reports a freshman class of 50; Bowdoin, 60; Brown, 247; Colgate, 55; Cornell, over 500; Dartmouth, 130; Hamilton, 54; Harvard (academic), 464; Lafayette, 85; University of Pennsylvania, 900 (which doubtless includes several departments); Rochester, 90; Rutgers, 48; Union, 80; Vermont, 100 Wesleyan, 100; Williams, 135; Yale (academic), 362. The freshman class at Brown shows a remarkable increase, and is larger than Harvard classes of fifteen years ago. The lists of total registration give: Boston University, 350; Chicago, 1,587; Columbia, about 2,000; Dartmouth, 530; Harvard (academic), 1,758; University of Illinois, 1,000; Johns Hopkins, about...
...should prove of universal interest to all students of the University, and especially to those new-comers who are not acquainted with the beautiful and interesting country about Boston and Cambridge. Besides the mere interest attaching to Mr. Eliot's lecture, it will doubtless prove exceedingly instructive. There is much in the vicinity of Boston that is of considerable historical interest. The lecture is to be illustrated by stereopticon views, which will make it still more entertaining...
...first statement of the needs of the Cambridge post office, reference was made to the rapidly increasing business carried on there. It would have added weight to the appeal then and will now doubtless satisfy those who signed the petition more than ever of the negligence of the Government, if the growth of the business were definitely stated...
...will doubtless surprise some members of the University who have obtained their mail regularly ever since they have been here, to be told that a condition of affairs exists at present in the Cambridge post office which is highly discreditable to the community, and which it would perhaps be possible for members of the University to remedy. Yet such is not far from being the case. A number of persons, among whom are several members of the Faculty, have had occasion to look into the matter and have found that the accommodations for the employes of the post office...
...more invigorating, and the appeal to purpose more effective, the horizon of the student broadens and his pulses quicken with a desire to be of some account to his fellow men. The turning of the thought of the time more and more to the welfare of the masses is doubtless an influence from without, affecting in this same direction the university and the student The result, thoroughly inevitable and legitimate, is an unaffected humanitarian impulse, sustained in one man or another, as the case may be, by varied personal, moral, or religious motives...