Word: bachelored
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...term "undergraduate student" applies to one who, in a college or scientific school, is doing the work prescribed for the degree of bachelor, or its technical equivalent...
...Sunday the Reverend A. Herbert Gray, M. A.; will preach in Appleton Chapel and will conduct prayers Monday, March 25 to Friday, March 29, inclusive. President Fitch of Andover Seminary will take prayers on Saturday, the 30th. Mr. Gray took his Bachelor's and Master's degrees from the University of Edinburgh and graduated from the New Theological College of the United Free Church in Edinburgh. He had for some years a large church in Manchester, Eigland, where he was brought face to face with the social problems of that city. He is at present the minister of the College...
...young and noble spendthrift with a tenor voice became engaged to a flighty princess who is one of his guests at "Liberty Hall". He is the heir apparent to a wealthy bachelor uncle, but is suddenly informed that he is penniless because his uncle has married and is the proud father of a son. The princess jilts him when she learns the news, as do all his friends, with the exception of the daughter of his housekeeper. After many trials, this lady falls into his arms just in time for the finale...
...from, yet still strangely interesting in themselves. Story-tellers and playwrights are not expected to be scholars, are they? Yet Owen Wister, '82, was in the first quarter of his class. Henry M. Rideout, '99, author of "The Siamese Cat", "Beached Keels", and other justly admired tales, took his bachelor's degree magna cum laude. Of the three most successful and most distinguished Harvard playwrights, Knoblauch, of '96, although he won no scholastic distinction, was well known to all who knew him as a deep and thorough student of the drama. Edward Sheldon, of 1908, took his degree magna...
...best traditions of New England. Grandson of the great navigator and mathematician, Nathaniel Bowditch, son of the eminent merchant and trusted administrator, Ingersoll Bowditch, nephew of the noble physician, Henry I. Bowditch, and near relative of the distinguished Pickerings of Salem, he was a Boston boy; a Harvard Bachelor of Arts of '61; a soldier throughout the war, wounded only to re-enlist; and thereafter continuously a worker in the service of his University, as student and honored teacher of physiology, until serious illness forced him from the ranks...