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Some of us being anxious to see Harvard College, or the group of buildings going generally under that name at Cambridge, and others of us to get to Longfellow's house and garden, we chartered a carriage and took Harvard first, pulling up at the handsome pile called the Harvard Memorial Hall, in the beautiful and lofty transept of which a multitude of tablets commemorate the names of the gallant graduates of Harvard who fell twenty years ago in the civil war. In the same building is a magnificent dining hall, decorated with portraits and busts of eminent Americans...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: AN ENGLISHMAN'S IMPRESSION OF HARVARD. | 3/24/1883 | See Source »

...Advocate editors ('83 and '84 board) will be taken at Pach's studio at 10 o'clock Saturday; the O. K. group ('83) at 11 o'clock, Monday...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: FACT AND RUMOR. | 3/22/1883 | See Source »

...this country. And whatever we can do to make her more worthy of our nation we do also for every other institution of superior education. You can see how it has been in this city with regard to the work of Harvard men in education here. When a small group of the younger men have established in this city good preparatory schools, they redound to the credit not only of Harvard, but of every other college which is fed by them. And when we establish in Cambridge a true American university, when by your loving help that shall...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: NEW YORK HARVARD CLUB. | 2/24/1883 | See Source »

...else is set aside as useless. This is the great objection to athletic exercises as they are at present conducted. Symmetry of development is never thought of, nor is it ever acquired by exclusive reliance upon any of our popular sports. Indeed, we would venture to select from any group of recognized athletes the oarsmen, the ball-players and the gymnasts, simply from their peculiar muscular development...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: PHYSICAL EDUCATION IN COLLEGES. | 1/22/1883 | See Source »

From some unknown and unique motives of benevolence Mr. George W. Childs of the Philadelphia Ledger has commissioned a New York firm "to send, at his expense," a copy of a heliotype portrait group of the "representative journals and journalists of America" to "each college in the United States...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 1/9/1883 | See Source »