Word: belonged
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...indeed a surprise. The course is incomplete. True, we have heard from the law, the ministry, medicine, engineering and railroading; but where are architecture, teaching, journalism, literature? Are not these vocations as worthy of presentation before college men as those already treated? Particularly the occupations of teaching and journalism belong to college men, and certainly deserve as much prominence as railroading and engineering. With all our feelings of welcome for the lecture to night on "leisure," we regret most heartily that it was not appointed for an evening at least three weeks later. The end of a most valuable course...
...awarded by the Inter-collegiate Athletic Association in 1876, when Princeton was the victor. For the next three years Columbia held it, but in 1880 it came to Harvard, where it has since remained. President Smith announced that if Harvard wins at Mott Haven this spring, the cup will belong to Harvard for good, as she will then have won seven of the fourteen spaces...
...grocery order book. Above these rank the larger stiff covered note-books of all shapes and sizes, men using these are worthy of some respect, for, however poor their notes may be, they intended to do well at the beginning. Note-books in grades above these belong to the "aristocracy" and comprise everything from the ones marked "journal" on the back up to those bound to private order. The finest notes will be found in the aristocratic class of note-books, for the owners of these take pride in their fullness and neatness...
...Since the noblest life on earth is always human life, the literature which deals with human life must always be the noblest literature; and, since the individual human life must always have a distinctness of interest, which cannot belong to any of the groups of human life, biography must always have a charm which no other kind of history can rival...
...first winter meeting, was a most commendable action. Our only regret is that the action was not taken sooner. If the winter sports cannot be held without the introduction of Muldoonism, then they were better not held at all. Trainers have their places without doubt, but they do not belong in the Hemenway Gymnasium. Contests in sparring among gentlemen, to be respectable, must be free from the vulgarity of professionalism, and Harvard men are presumably gentlemen. We do not know by what means the trainers were induced to attend the meeting last Saturday, but we sincerely hope, and we believe...