Word: publishable
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...interest all members of the University alike. Particularly welcome are the Votes of the Corporation and the Overseers, and the abstracts of the labors of Harvard scientists. We cordially welcome this new addition to our University literature, and hope that the prosperity of Harvard will soon enable it to publish a periodical like those of some of the English universities...
...work which we doubt not will reflect great honor both on the author and on the College. It is of the highest importance that this edition should be complete, and to this end the co-operation of all persons interested is extremely important. In our column of Brevities we publish the directions which Mr. Child has given for the prosecution of this work. There are, doubtless, many people of Irish or Scotch birth who can repeat the ballads which have existed orally during so many years : but the number of these is on the wane. Many of the old songs...
...Book Table. The 'Varsity's change of cover is no improvement, we fear; but the 'Varsity is emphatically a paper of sound judgment, - except possibly as regards the Notre Dame Scholastic, with which it is waging bitter war on the question of a college paper's right to publish official communications. The Yale News appears to be seriously alarmed at the indications of a "brace" by Harvard in athletic matters. "When Harvard braces it means that there is work ahead. We cannot afford to lose what we have won." The Sun that visits Cornell daily is disposed...
...another column we publish a communication upon what the writer considers dangerous concessions on the part of the College to the principle of co-education. The special grievance that has called this forth is that ladies are allowed to attend Professor Hedge's lectures in German 8, - a regular College course, - and that they have come in such numbers that the elective has been assigned to a new room, Harvard 6, in which there are no facilities for writing, and the ventilation is notoriously bad. So far as this is concerned, we entirely agree with the writer when he says...
...races last spring, and seem to offer several possible candidates for the 'Varsity. As usual with the autumn races, the weather was not very favorable, and the water was far from smooth. Some defective points in the arrangements for the race are alluded to in the account which we publish elsewhere, and we might add that there were no tickets to the Union Boat House, which occasioned some dissatisfaction. We mention these matters that they may be rectified in the spring, for the race itself was so interesting that nothing better in the way of rowing could be desired...