Word: honorability
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...HAVEN, CONN., Dec. 12. - The Yale Faculty announce that they have decided to give special honors in both the one and two years courses in the department of music recently organized and just placed under the supervision of Professor Parker of Boston. The first honor award will not be made till June, 1895. A thesis on some special topic will be required of each successful candidate in both one and two years courses. This act of the Faculty practically places the department of music on a parity with the other departments of the university...
While feeling the keenest sympathy for the splendid young life at Harvard and having the firmest belief in the manliness and honor of the great majority of the students, I should nevertheless be lacking in my duty to them and to the Alma Mater were I not to express myself strongly in condemnation of an event which lately took place in Boston, flagrant in its selfishness and utter disregard of the rights of others...
...true manliness must grow from the students themselves. Let us be above any necessity for police interference on such occasions. Let the name of Harvard University grow to be not only the synonym of high education; let it also be another name for that true manliness which means honor, courtesy and respect for the feelings of others. I remain...
...says that the honor of the faculty committee is concerned in the charges brought, as the connection between them and the Pennsylvania athletics is close, and he invites the Yale association or any person to whom Yale chooses to give the proper credentials, to inspect the books of the University of Pennsylvania faculty and to see if the charges of professionalism are substantiated therefrom. He offers to give any Yale committee all the assistance possible in ferreting out ineligible students...
...seems strange that it should be necessary to call the attention of the student body to an action so flagrantly opposed to the high ideas of honor on which Harvard men pride themselves as the misuse of books provided by the University libraries. We refer to the way in which some men, - their number we are sure is not large, - appropriate reserved books to their own uses with absolute disregard of the convenience of their fellow students. Perhaps this is too mild a criticism of a man who takes from the shelves a greater number of books than his immediate...