page_0923

OverviewTranscribeVersionsHelp

Here you can see all page revisions and compare the changes have been made in each revision. Left column shows the page title and transcription in the selected revision, right column shows what have been changed. Unchanged text is highlighted in white, deleted text is highlighted in red, and inserted text is highlighted in green color.

3 revisions
Khufu at Aug 13, 2022 02:29 AM

page_0923

[image: Ribbon with motto, Sapientia, et Doctrina, Stabilitas , written above College Crest]

completely representative of the undenominational
character of the work it is at present doing.

In view of the great importance of
having practical unanimity among the graduates
and benefactors of the University, respecting the important
changes in its constitution, which have
been proposed, the Assembly appoint a committee
to confer with the Trustees of the University, and
aid them in obtaining a satisfactory solution of the
whole question brought before it in the report of the
University. Committee to report to next Assembly.

On October 16th (University Day)
1900. the City of Kingston passed a bylaw
voting the sum of $50,000 to the University for the
erection of a new Arts building. The Chancellor
at the meeting of the University Council, 1899,
had appealed for a grant for this purpose and
pointed out that the increasing numbers of students
made additional accomodation an absolute necessity,
unless future applicants were to be turned away,
an action which would be as injurious to the best
interests of the city as of the University.

It was represented also that the University,
though generously aided in times past by private
individuals had as yet never made any
appeal to the municipality, and that it was

[image: morrocan lamp]
1900

1881

page_0923

completely representative of the undenominational
character of the work it is at present doing.

In view of the great importance of
having practical unanimity among the graduate
and benefactor of the University, respecting the im-
portant changes in its constitution, which have
been proposed, the Assembly appoint a committee
to confer with the Trustees of the University, and
aid them in obtaining a satisfactory solution of the
whole question brought before it in the report of the
University. Committee to report to next Assembly.

On October 16th (University Day)
1900. the City of Kingston passed a byelaw
voting the sum of $50,000 to the University for the
erection of a new Arts building. The Chancellor
at the meeting of the University Council, 1899,
had appealed for a grant for this purpose and
pointed out that the increasing numbers of students
made additional accomodation an absolute necessity,
unless future applicants were to be turned away,
an action which would be as infurious to the best
intrests of the city as of the University.

It was represented also that the University,
through generously aided in times past by private
individuals had as yet never made any
appreal to the municipality, and that it was