Word: beare
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...petitioners must bear in mind the following eligibility rules: All men who are candidates for the degrees of A.B. or S.B. in 1910, all men who have received or will receive their degrees as of the class of 1910, and all men who are fourth-year special students shall be eligible to vote; but no man who has voted in any previous Class Day election shall be eligible to vote. In addition, men now in the University not included under any of these qualifications, who entered with the class of 1910, and who are not officially registered with the class...
Compositions must be presented to the chairman of the committee on or before March 1, 1910. The title page must bear an assumed name, and the writer must give in, with his composition, a sealed letter containing his real name and superscribed with his assumed one. The committee in charge of the competition consists of the following: W. A. Locke '69, chairman; O. Foote '74, G. A. Burdett...
...heart-felt congratulation and good wishes on the occasion of your inauguration in the words of the cable message which I have just received from Emmanuel College: 'May you enjoy a tenure, long, illustrious, and worthy alike of the illustrious traditions of your office and of the name you bear...
...thoroughly scholarly training, befitting the dignity and importance of the learned professions"; and finally, in inducing the preparatory schools to raise their standards, diversify their teaching and catch the spirit of the elective system. On this Professor Kuehnemann observes that "discipline and liberty in the realm of education bear to each other the relation of premise and conclusion. Hence misgivings will be stronger in a country which, in respect to its school-system or systems, has not yet ceased to betray its character as a land of pioneers...
Under the title of "The White Bear of Norway," Mr. H.G. Leach gives a somewhat journalese account of Bjornson and his struggle to form a national language in Norway. One can only hope that Mr. Leach is not a good reporter; according to him Bjornson admits that the rural speech he is trying to suppress is more beautiful than that of the cities, which he is trying to force on all, but maintains that the future of Norway, "like the future of all other nations, is to be industrial, and the language of industry is the language of the cities...