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...difficult to see the reason which has prompted the closing during the evening of the department libraries in Sever. If we understand aright it is one of the duties of a college to offer to its students every advantage to study within its power. This duty, however, is in this one instance omitted. Undoubtedly there are comparatively few men who would make use of the reference library privilege if it were granted, and yet that is no sufficient reason for withholding it. There are many times in the aggregate when students are considerably benefited by having access to the department...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 10/16/1889 | See Source »

...doubles to be played tomorrow. The officers for the ensuing year were elected as follows: president, Campbell of Columbia; vice president, Shaw of Harvard; secretary, R. Huntington of Yale. It was voted to hold the next year's tournament at New Haven, and the association has decided to offer a $500 cup to be held each year by the college winning first place, and to become the property of the college first winning seven first prizes...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Intercollegiate Tennis. | 10/9/1889 | See Source »

...most important feature of the college is the botanical laboratory, the gift of a few enthusiastic friends of botany. This has been fitted with apparatus mainly imported from Europe, and is considered the best fitted laboratory for women in the country. Especially does it offer superior opportunities for advanced courses in botany. The advantages offered in this department are for three classes of students. Those who hold first degrees from Barnard and other colleges, and desire to work for a higher degree, making a special study of botany; those who wish to study some one branch of botany, without reference...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Barnard College, | 9/26/1889 | See Source »

...purpose of Barnard college to offer women as thorough and as broad a training as can be obtained anywhere, and the trustees are now at work pushing the construction of chemical and physical laboratories, dormitories and recitation halls...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Barnard College, | 9/26/1889 | See Source »

...Chamberlain, '65, of New York, followed by a dinner in Massachusetts Hall, which was attended by about 150 members and guests of the association. At that meeting Charles C. Beaman, '65, of New York, a member of the association gave $500 to the association to enable it to offer during the next five years an annual prize of $100 for the best essay to be written by some member of the law school. The prize of $100 offered by the association in 1888 was awarded to Samuel Williston, LL. B., '88, of Cambridge, for an essay on "The History...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Harvard Law School. | 6/20/1889 | See Source »

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