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...more systematic and energetic work on the part of former instructors. Perhaps the English Department illustrates this improvement as well as any. Still the departments of French, German, Political Economy, and History should not go unmentioned. No department can be said to have suffered recession. Advance has been the rule, while retrogradation has been unknown. Finally, with regard to the relations between faculty and students, the improvement has been very marked. A Faculty-Student Conference Committee has been established, and has already shown itself extremely successful. The need of co-operation was felt, and has partially been...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: 1884-85. | 6/19/1885 | See Source »

There is little to criticize in the form in which our crew is rowing at present. As a rule there is a good deal of life in the boat; there is little or no hang at either end of the stroke; and improvement has been made in keeping the pressure on all through the stroke, so that there is little let up. All the men have more or less serious individual faults. Bow: rowed in '87 freshman crew; chief fault is tendency to raise his hand at the finish instead of drawing them in straight; this makes him finish rather...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The University Crew. | 6/16/1885 | See Source »

...written at all. Then, too, in time the poorer motive of money may lead to that higher and truer motive whereby men are prompted to write from very pleasure, and from their actually having something to write about. Here at Harvard, literary activity is the exception rather than the rule. Still it is true that in this respect, the present year goes far ahead of many previous years, Let us hope that next year will outstrip this. No persons would welcome greater literary ability in the college at large more than the at present over-worked editors of the college...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 6/12/1885 | See Source »

...recent addresses, that a college should not be turned into a professional school, that specialism in its narrow sense should not be pursued in a four years' college course. While every one should be prompted by some one purpose in choosing his electives, yet that purpose should not rule supreme. The line of courses pursued should not at college be a sharply defined line all of one color, but rather a line, it is true, easily distinguished, but here and there shaded off even into entirely different colors. These are not the words of the address, only the ideas...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Specialism. | 6/12/1885 | See Source »

...school of law, medicine or theology, he will find that he is not suffered to study what he pleases in order to obtain a degree, but the studies which the experience of those who have been over the ground long before agree in prescribing for him, and, as a rule, he follows the line marked out without question. There is probably still room for reform in the curriculum of American colleges, but it is not impossible that President Eliot is going a little fast and is a little too enthusiastic, and we do not believe any considerable number of American...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: What Constitutes a Liberal Education. | 6/11/1885 | See Source »

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