Word: centralized
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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Charles Arthur Barnard '02, right guard, prepared at the Central High School in Washington. He was substitute guard on the University eleven in his Sophomore year and regular right guard on the University team last year. He is 21 years old, weighs 201 pounds, and is 6 feet 2 1-2 inches tall...
...than at any previous stage of its development. Mr. Oakes Ames, the assistant director, has had the hearty co-operation of the head gardener in all particulars, and has carried out certain plans which have been carefully matured. The most important of these plans is the improvement of the central pond, a small body of water which has heretofore given much trouble. Mr. Ames attacked the problem in a thorough manner, and the result has been most gratifying. The water-plants have grown and bloomed well, and warrant the expectation that a continuation of the same policy next year will...
...Mitchell, therefore, selects Becky Sharp as the central figure of his drama. From her life he picks out four strong "situations,"--the flight with Rawdon, the Waterloo ball, the midnight supper with Lord Steyne, and the last days at Pumpernickel,--and to the strongest of these, the third, he subordinates the rest, making each the subject...
...Gordon, who was sent in November by the Peabody Museum to explore the ruined cities of Central America, has just returned. He spent two months in Honduras and three months in Guatemala. The principal part of his work was the exploration of the ruins of Quirigua, Guatemala, the most important ruined city of the ancient Maya civilization. It is buried in a dense tropical jungle through which roads had to be cut to reach the site. The most remarkable of the relics are the stone monoliths covered with inscriptions and weighing from fifteen to sixty tons. During his investigations...
...spite of their apparent separation are still today parts of one philosophy only. The University has somewhat lost sight of the unity of all philosophical subjects, and has above all forgotten that this united philosophy, is more than one science among other sciences, that it is indeed the central science which alone has the power to give unity to the whole University work....A School of Philosophy as a visible unity in the midst of the Yard will renew this truth, and thus give once more to the over-whelming multitude of intellectual efforts of our University a real unity...