Word: subjecting
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...office in Cambridge has been made, and we wish to lend the weight of our influence to the move. The service supplied to us by the Western Union, to which company the office belongs, is certainly wretched as the regulations show. The business people and citizens of Cambridge are subject to this inconvenience all the year round, and must feel it considerably. The same is true of the body of students, who, connected with all parts of the country by family ties, are often subjected to great personal inconvenience by the delay in receiving important messages from home and from...
...above all the modern "scientific" method in history that is in vogue at Harvard. The fundamental distinction of this method,-the distinction expressed by the definition of "history as past politics, politics as present history" is recognized as governing the plan of instruction in almost every course under this subject. At Cambridge (and Cambridge and Harvard in this sense are practically one) has sprung up within the last few years a circle of historical students and writers, particularly in American History, not yet firmly enough bound together by common ideas, or united under a common leader to form a school...
...Brown library in Providence,-in addition to courses 2 and 13 in United States Constitutional History, course 18 in American Colonial History, course 6 and 8 in Political Economy, treating of the History of the Tariff and of Finance in the United States, and course 4 in the same subject, touching on the economic history of America; the opportunities of the student of the history of this country to be found in Cambridge are not by any means inconsiderable...
...always been a subject of regret, however, that better opportunities could not be offered to students who desired to pursue some special branch here at Harvard, but for pecuniary reasons were unable to do so. With the exception of the scholarships, which are confined almost exclusively to undergraduates, very little pecuniary aid can be offered by the college itself to students who desire to attend some special courses without becoming members of the college proper. The founding of these Morgan fellowships has in a great measure removed this difficulty, as by the regulations which attend their disposal they...
...last been arranged, and nothing remains now but for our freshmen to go down to New Haven and do their best to win. To do this the class must support their nine by sending down as large a delegation as possible. Yale enthusiasm is almost too trite a subject to write upon. Whenever the Yale freshmen come to Boston or Cambridge, they are invariably accompanied by a large and enthusiastic crowd of supporters, who contribute in a large degree to the success which has so often attended them. An opportunity has now come for our freshmen to assist in winning...