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...desired, but the establishment of a firmer basis of agreement among all rival colleges cannot but result in good. There are one or two outcomes of the ordinary growth and experience of college faculties towards which all are tending; and one of these is the elective system, in some form or other...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 5/12/1882 | See Source »

...base-ball prospects are fair. The games so far have shown us that we have aplendid material throughout. Considerable unevenness yet remains, but this will wear off with more practice. By the time the championship games commence, we hope to play in much better form. As it is, our out-field, we believe, is as strong as can be found on any amateur nine in the country, while batting, heretofore Princeton's weakest point, is now one of her strongest. We have made our fair share of base hits in every game yet played, with very creditable totals. An advantageous...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: LETTER FROM PRINCETON. | 5/10/1882 | See Source »

...manifolds them with a copygram, by copying or by printing, and sells the copies at handsome prices. Often the compilers add to the notes taken in the lectures, the results of long, tedious hours of grinding in the library, systematize and index the whole, and publish them in the form of book leaves. One of these leaves, containing four or eight pages, comes out two weeks or so after the lectures are delivered. At the end of the year, if bound together, they make a most valuable book. Last year the notes in the course on the constitutional history...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE GLOBE ON THE HARVARD STUDENT. | 5/10/1882 | See Source »

...These bay windows also give light to the large lecture room on the northerly side of the building. This lecture room will be similar to that now known to students as Sever 11. The size is 50 by 73, while the seats are placed on steps in a circular form. The smaller lecture rooms, however, have the old, familiar chairs with inches in front. At the westerly end of the main hall is the staircase hall, opposite which and communicating with the porch are three professors' private rooms or studies, each...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE NEW LAW SCHOOL. | 5/10/1882 | See Source »

...auspices of the Art Club and the Philological Society, to a rather small audience. The lecturer gave a general sketch of the ruins in Yucatan and of their importance, after which he illustrated his remarks by a number of rather faint views. He said that the ruins of Yucatan form the best example of the ancient civilization on this continent, and that from these remains a much better idea of the ancient people can be obtained than from the fabulous accounts of the Spaniards. Yucatan was the centre of a civilization extending north to the Pueblos, and south...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE RUINS OF YUCATAN. | 5/5/1882 | See Source »