Word: forgotten
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...instructor has not time to deliver his lecture and answer the questions of such large sections in his regular hours, but it should be remembered that questions are chiefly valuable when arising in connection with the subject, and questions which would be of much service if asked immediately are forgotten or of no use if they must be kept a week. There are many men in the course who cannot afford to give to it more time than they do already, especially when there is no compensation offered for the loss of their privilege of asking those immediate questions which...
...spacious buildings, surrounded by lawns and groves of trees; they find much of their pleasure in games which excite a passionate rivalry in the development of bodily energy and skill, and which in this respect are far more efficacious than any gymnastic and fencing exercises. It must not be forgotten that the more young men are cut off from fresh air and from the opportunity of vigorous exercise, the more in duced will they be to seek an apparent refreshment in the misuse of tobacco and of intoxicating drinks. It must also be admitted that the English universities accustom their...
Then the intercollegiate association must not be forgotten. This association has furnished for me of the most promising of the new material that has blossomed on the professional diamond this season. Jones of Yale virtually won the championship for the Athletics. Richmond, as is well known, is a graduate of Brown, and Hubbard is a Yalensian, Coolidge of Harvard has received offers for the last three seasons to join the professional ranks. Sawyer of Clevelands is a college graduate, Bassett of the Browns is thought of as an acquisition for the Providences, while Baker, the Harvard short stop, a fine...
...without? It seems to the writer that a plan which promises injury to our colleges, both large and small, would not be truly promotive of education. In the quest for higher culture, Mr. R. B. Hayes, Mr. Andrew D. White, and the other advocates of this measure have forgotten that the safety of our system lies, not in the learning of the few, but in the intelligence of the many. A national university could not diffuse education, it could only impart to a very few a degree of learning which most men are not ambitious to possess, and which...
...over Yale in athletic sports for the year to come. So crushing a defeat can hardly be retrieved in less time, even by so great a college as that at New Haven. The crew that has won for Harvard the "amateur champion ship of America" will not soon be forgotten...