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...about 250 and is steadily increasing. Within the last year the Society has changed its policy from one of chiefly formal membership to an organization of working fellowship with a wider scope of work. Besides its bible study meetings, weekly conferences, and social service work, it is planning to establish a mission for men and boys in Somerville, and in time to take charge of all the religious and settlement work in that town...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: ST. PAUL'S SOCIETY DINNER | 12/8/1911 | See Source »

...press but its purpose is narrower. Even the University of Chicago, although it has a press of its own, does not even attempt to take the scholarly position of such as the Clarendon press of Cambridge. Harvard not only has an opportunity to be the first to establish such an institution, but it is in a position to make it successful. Its thought has long been forcing a way into publication by various channels. Separate endowments enable books in the various branches of scholarship to be published by commercial houses. The University itself, however, can not handle what rightly belongs...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: A HARVARD UNIVERSITY PRESS. | 11/24/1911 | See Source »

...Prize Play, and three other pages bristle with reviews of plays in Boston, this seems to be going a bit strong. Particularly as there is nothing else of special value or interest in the number. "Professor Spink" continues his mildly satirical lectures in a style which will at once establish its familiarity for readers of the Advocate files of the early eighties; Mr. Amery-Small, and Mr. Austin Van Bent (genteel names!) incur exposure by a pointer dog in an attempt to evade the game laws of the state of Michigan, all incidental to trifles like lying and forgery,--which...

Author: By L. WITHINGTON ., | Title: Current Advocate Reviewed | 11/11/1911 | See Source »

...society implies. But the CRIMSON holds that the cause of this ignorance lies rather with the rules of admission to the Harvard chapter than in a unique indifference on the part of Harvard underclassmen. To be eligible for the Chapter during freshman and Sophomore year and to establish a fixed standard which, if attained, insures admission, would prove two very powerful agents toward informing newcomers that Phi Beta Kappa exists...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: PHI BETA KAPPA. | 10/16/1911 | See Source »

...University received from the estate of Mrs. Amey Richmond Sheldon about $350,000 to establish in memory of her husband, Frederick Sheldon '42, the Frederick Sheldon Fund. The income of this fund is "to be applied in the discretion of and under rules to be prescribed by the President and Fellows...to the further education of students of promise and standing in the University by providing them with facilities for further education by travel after graduation or by establishing travelling fellowships." By vote of the President and Fellows, the income of the Frederick Sheldon Fund is to be assigned...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Sheldon Fellows Working Abroad | 10/4/1911 | See Source »

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