Word: cared
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...presence of the large audience which went out to hear Mr. Copeland talk last night on "The Old Comedies," was not only a tribute to the speaker, but a pleasing subject for reflection. It is encouraging to find that in the busy mid-year period so many men care to take their relaxation in such a profitable...
WANTED.- Tutor in Fine Arts 5, or good notes of course. Please ask for M. Care of Thurston's, immediately...
...study of educational methods throughout the country has in recent years attracted a great deal of careful attention which now has taken very definite form. At a meeting of the National Council of Education in 1891, a committee, appointed at a previous meeting, reported through its chairman, Mr. James H. Baker, the principal of the Denver High School, on the uniformity of school programmes and the requirements for admission to college. The committee was continued and authorized to investigate the general subject of uniformity and to report to the National Council of Education in 1892. They made some specific recommendations...
...nature is the most important. A picture, accurate in every detail of some scene in real life, is pleasing when we first look at it, because of the story which it tells, but it always tells the same story; it can tell but one story because of the care which has been taken to represent this one idea truthfully. A picture fulfilling our ideal gives the suggestion of nature with just sufficient accuracy to enable the outsider to put his own characters in the place of those on the canvas, so that the picture is a new story for every...
...details, we can only suggest a few things. In the first place the point of prime importance should be to make the fund general; the size of it will take care of itself, but every man should have a chance to give with the assurance that no matter how small his gift may be it is welcome. Indeed the men who can give the least are likely to be most anxious to give, for to them Mr. Bolles gave most. Unless we are very much mistaken, enough money would readily be subscribed to found a scholarship, to be named after...