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...mind that not everything can be bought at reduced rates by the society, but that reasonable efforts will be made to obtain many things not in the following list which will be continued in the next bulletins. Members are requested to make note of the list and to learn, from actual experiment, in what ways the society can serve them. Besides books, stationery, and coal and wood, members can order: All the leading American and foreign periodicals; art photographs, from Soule Photograph Co.; musical instruments, all that are kept by J. C. Haynes and Co., 33 Court street, Boston. (Many...
...mind that not everything can be bought at reduced rates by the society, but that reasonable efforts will be made to obtain many things not in the following list which will be continued in the next bulletins. Members are requested to make note of the list and to learn, from actual experiment, in what ways the society can serve them. Besides books, stationery, and coal and wood, members can order: All the leading American and foreign periodicals; art photographs, from Soule Potograph Co.; musical instruments, all that are kept by J. C. Haynes and Co, 33 Court street, Boston. (Many...
...would be already in training. For some time the condition of athletics at Harvard has been very perplexing, so much so as to justify the management of the Boat Club in declining to enter upon further negotiations until the matter was settled. The University of Pennsylvania is now to learn that the prime reason why Harvard cannot row the race proposed in May, is because her men do not get in training soon enough to do themselves justice in a race at so early a date. Another and even more strenuous reason is, that human endurance cannot stand the terrific...
...have now for some few years enjoyed this privilege to the full, and, although the principle was carried at Oxford yesterday by a large majority, (100 to 46), its application was limited to a capricious selection of subjects, and was hampered by sundry restrictions. We are glad, however, to learn from the Warden of Merton's speech that the promoters will not be content until they have won "complete academical equality" for women. [Pall Mall...
...severest punishment which could be inflicted, next to expulsion, was the much dreaded degradation. This, we learn, "consisted in placing a student on the list, in consequence of some offence, below the level to which his father's condition would assign him; and thus declared that he had disgraced his family...