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...Boston letter to the Chicago Tribune gives the following bright description of Dr. Holmes and the Medical Students. It says: "The most popular man in the Cedical School is Dr. Oliver wendell Holmes, though he is no longer an active member of the faculty. The genial "autocrat" cannot stand entirely aloof from his first love, and almost every month he pays a visit to the doctor mill on the Back Bay. Some of the younger professors think that Dr. Holmes is pretty far behind the times-"an old fogy, you know" but the boys have no thought for them when...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: DR. HOLMES AT THE NEW MEDICAL SCHOOL. | 2/26/1884 | See Source »

...value of school property in the South is about $6,000,000 against $188,000,000 in the North...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: FACT AND RUMOR. | 2/26/1884 | See Source »

...parts of the university and bring their united weight to bear on the problems of a single part. Each speaker is invited to deal with some point in which his special vocation touches the thought or the life of students of Theology. Thus, the corporation, the overseers, the Law School, and the Medical School and the various departments of the college, each says its word to the Divinity School. This step of the Divinity School is an example worth imitating. It is good for the teachers, because it leads them to discuss the larger relations of their special subjects...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 2/25/1884 | See Source »

...alumnus of the Law School, in a letter to the Advertiser, thus upbraids the alumni of that department for lack of interest in the school. He says: "You have said not a word too much in praise of the wise and sagacious gift of Dr. Calvin Ellis to the Medical School. When will the legal alumni give to the law department of the university the benefit of a personal interest, support and generosity comparable in any way to that which the medical men have shown to their professional school...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 2/23/1884 | See Source »

EDITORS HERALD-CRIMSON.-In a recent conversation with a graduate of Harvard in the '75's, now an instructor in a Harvard preparatory school, I listened to some very emphatic opinions concerning the recent athletic regulations. "At first," said this gentleman, "I could not believe that the regulations were anything but a hoax. I cannot explain them now. How can they be true? What has called them forth? They seem to me utterly unreasonable. The students, of course, are placed in a position at once embarrassing and oppressive. But the faculty, I think, occupies the worst position. This action...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 2/23/1884 | See Source »