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...from sittings already made. All such are urged to decide at once whether the proofs be satisfactory or not. If they are, word should be immediately sent to the studio; if not, it is hoped that they will lose no time in making other sittings. Appointments may be made either through the undersigned or at the studio. The committee cannot too strongly urge prompt action on the part of all, so that the work may be finished within the specified time...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: SENIOR CLASS PHOTOGRAPHS. | 1/12/1883 | See Source »

...university training a help, and not a drawback, and except when defeated by want of means or other special circumstances, never fail to get it for their sons. All Scotchmen are not graduates, but in theory the Scotchman - who, be it remembered, is not led away on the subject either by flunkyism or sentiment, or any strong wish that his sons should have an easy time - holds decidedly that they ought to be, that it would be well if they could be, and that if they were the work would be better and not worse done. And he quotes with...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE VALUE OF A COLLEGE TRAINING. | 1/12/1883 | See Source »

...properly elected candidate his rights. If the conspirators succeed in this where will they stop? They now number fully four thousand. All they have to do is to fill every office, State and Federal, with members of the society, and to put none but Alpha Delts in command, either in the army or the navy, and they can then seize the supreme power, and compel every man, woman and child to drink lemonade, eat oysters and wear outlandish breast-pins...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE GREAT CONSPIRACY. | 1/10/1883 | See Source »

Sophomore theme III. is due tomorrow. Subjects: 1. A description of either a Gothic Cathedral or a Greek Temple. 2. "Patience" or "Pinafore" turned into a Narrative. 3. On the meaning of the word "Swell." 4. The Present Situation of the Republican party. 5. The Comparative Merits of Base-ball and Foot-ball. 6. "Why I came to Harvard...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 1/8/1883 | See Source »

...cheerful and richly sculptured Battell Chapel. It is known to everybody that from time immemorial students of every college have looked upon daily perfunctory prayers as the bugbear of their lives. To stand over a young man with a policeman's club and compel him to worship, hardly conduces either to the glory of God or to the student's religious edification. Coercion at Harvard especially is something anomalous and discordant...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: UNDERGRADUATE LIFE AT HARVARD. | 1/5/1883 | See Source »