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...Chair of Prints, the first to exist anywhere, will soon be founded in the University. An endowment fund of $150,000 is necessary, of which $100,000 has already been contributed by lovers of art in New York and Boston...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: CHAIR OF PRINTS PROBABLE | 10/23/1912 | See Source »

...standards. Numerous prominent musicians and critics are Harvard graduates and a small but growing body of undergraduates are seriously interested in musical work. It is to unite these in the spirit of our musical ideals and to furnish them with a paper of a standard which certainly does not exist in this country, that, this magazine has been founded. One of its most important uses will be to furnish a means for the publication of original compositions by undergraduates and recent graduates, thus stimulating this important side of creative work. Considered from a purely literary standpoint, it should furnish undergraduates...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE HARVARD MUSICAL REVIEW. | 10/17/1912 | See Source »

Today candidates for the various dormitory crews will report and begin a season which always furnishes plenty of good fun and exercise. This crew work is a recognition that boat houses and shells exist, not only for the development of the University crews, but for the benefit and pleasure of all undergraduates. Certainly no intramural sport offers better opportunity for healthful exercise, genuine fun, and good fellowship, and those who are not now indulging in some form of sport will find it well worth their while to join a dormitory squad...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: DORMITORY CREW WORK. | 10/7/1912 | See Source »

...race ever partake of the interest now attached to a Yale contest, we think that the best interests of intercollegiate sportsmanship are served when Harvard appears on the Princeton schedule. A dual meet in track alone remains to put the two universities on the same apparent relations as now exist between Harvard and Yale...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: A PRINCETON BOAT ON THE CHARLES. | 4/3/1912 | See Source »

Speaking of examinations in general, President Lowell in his recent report said: "Examinations are in all cases defective instruments. But in an institution of any size, they are a necessity, and where they exist, their character and scope will inevitably determine in large measure the attitude of the student toward his studies." Our system of regular and make-up examinations is too well known to need explanation here. The following are the four main objections to the present plan and the improvements suggested...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: EXAMINATIONS. | 4/2/1912 | See Source »

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