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...signify their intention of subscribing. For a very small price ($2) facilities are afforded for the perusal of nearly all the leading papers of the country, as well as magazines and college papers. The expense this year will necessarily be larger than in former years, for the college authorities feel unable to pay for heating the room as heretofore. It is, therefore, earnestly requested by the committee that all who can will hand in their names immediately. If 125 names are not in the committee's hands by Saturday night the reading-room will have to be given up. Names...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: HARVARD READING-ROOM. | 10/26/1882 | See Source »

...From so large a class," as every one has said before, we may confidently expect the average number of candidates for the crews and nines, as well as new-comers to fill up the vacancies and to better the records of past years. Rumors are so unsatisfactory, that we feel much relieved that at length an opportunity is offered the freshmen to show us who and what they are, and in the future we shall be able to build our expectations upon what they are doing and not upon what they are said to have done. But, again...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 10/25/1882 | See Source »

...caused by the spectacle of his going out to Harvard College on commencement day to receive his LL. D., followed by a roaring mob of vicious and illiterate followers. Many old Bostonians have felt as if this scene, if they ever beheld it, would kill them. They will now feel easier, for they see that, if elected, his appearance at the old university will be simply the triumph of a cultured conscience over the temptations and trials of American life and of the application to public affairs by an elderly lawyer and soldier of the loftiest principles of private morality...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 10/23/1882 | See Source »

...feel that few persons are aware of the rapid strides which have been taken at Harvard of late years towards the complete and perfect study of Greek and Roman antiquities. Leaving out of account the curriculum of classical studies common to our colleges in general in a more or less eminent degree, we assume for Harvard the sole enjoyment in America of a chair for the study of classical philology in its strictest sense and as it is followed in the German universities. Such a course was not calculated to reveal any extraordinary or immediate developments, but it is hoped...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 10/20/1882 | See Source »

...different times, so that each student will find at least one of the sections suiting his own convenience. Mr. Jones is an able instructor, and puts pains and enthusiasm into his work. The department of elocution at Harvard is at present weak. If students would in a body feel the necessity of making most of the facilities offered, we feel sure the faculty would be obliged to take steps in order to bring up elocution to its proper standing in the college curriculum. As matters now stand, only a few men go into elocution, and the sections are small. Even...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 10/19/1882 | See Source »