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...communication in yesterday's CRIMSON, designating the Yard room assignment as a failure, was such an expression of unfriendly criticism without any foundation in truth or reason, that I deem it advisable to set forth a few facts in the case and let men judge for themselves the degree of success of the early room drawing...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Communication. | 2/27/1904 | See Source »

...picturesqueness, and when he has said it, he stops. It is to be hoped that our voluminous undergraduate critics will profit by his example as well as his advice. "When I was a Duke," a story by D. W. Streeter, scarcely smacks of the British nobility, yet it sets forth an amusing situation in Irish language. A good natured, Chinese cook who artistically stabs a man between sips of tea, is well described by W. F. Boericke, under the title of "Wing." "A Sea Change," is interesting on account of its land-lubber usage of yachting terms, and occasionally provokes...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Review of the Advocate. | 2/1/1904 | See Source »

...attended by invited delegates from all over the world, will hold its first session in the Hall of International Congresses at the St. Louis Exposition on Monday, September 19. The purpose of the committee in charge is to have "an international congress whose objects are to discuss and set forth the unity and mutual relations of the sciences, to review their historical growth, to develop their fundamental principles, and to promote mutual sympathy and co-operative effort among specialists engaged in different fields of research." The officers of the congress are: Simon Newcomb S.'58, president; Professor Hugo Munsterberg...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: CONGRESS OF SCIENCES | 1/14/1904 | See Source »

...history of the College papers for the last thirty years or so shows a curious tendency for the periods of most vigorous blossoming to come about ten years apart: there was the time of '76-'77 in which the Lampoon was shot forth on its joyous way, the time of '86-'87 in which the Monthly was launched with high hopes and ambitions, and the time of '95-'96 in which again there seemed to be an overplus of writers so brilliant that editors in chief could hardly set their standards too high. Between these periods the spirit of literature...

Author: By J. H. Gardiner., | Title: The December Monthly. | 12/4/1903 | See Source »

...Nature of Goodness." This work is intended to supplement Professor Palmer's earlier work. "The Field of Ethics." In it the first of the moral problems which were merely stated in "The Field of Ethics" are fully debated, and a clear doctrine concerning the nature of goodness is set forth...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: "The Nature of Goodness" | 11/28/1903 | See Source »

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