Word: forth
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...gladly accepted as thesis work in a number of College courses. Then for the men who are interested in the more practical side of the question there is opportunity to take charge of various clubs and classes, to aid in getting employment, to encourage various negro enterprises, and so forth...
...taken in the double tumbling of the Princeton trio, in which H. H. Short of this year's football team exhibited great strength, supporting the other two men on his shoulders and hands. The work of R. M. Emery 3L. and R. S. Coryell '08 in single tumbling called forth frequent applause. Princeton's work on the flying rings was very skillful. J. N. Sayre gave a finished exhibition of club swinging. G. F. Evans '05 outclassed all others by his superior work on the horse...
This attitude, which is a step in advance of that set forth by Herzen, was the ground from which Bakoonin's theories started. Bakoonin formed a most important link between the merely intellectual movement of the '40's and the revolutionary period of the '60's; he transmitted the legacy of Herzen's comparatively anarchistic socialism to the first Russian outbreaks in later years. There now arose a most important question--was the mere emancipation of the poorer classes to act as a stepping-stone to the realization of the most radical socialistic aspirations of these people? The discussion...
...article on "Work for the New Harvard Medical School," Dr. H. C. Ernst '76 gives his view of what the new school should accomplish. Dr. Ernst sets forth a scheme to make the school a "University of Medical Science,--a place where students of medicine in all its branches may come, to fine an equipment perfectly adapted to their needs, and teachers prepared to foster and encourage research in all its directions for the demonstration of new truths, as well as to give instruction in all branches of present medical knowledge." The degree of Doctor of Medicine, conferred by such...
...judgment is that destructive criticism has gone far enough and that if anything more is to be offered either by undergraduates or alumni it should be put forth, not for the sake of finding fault with what has been done, but to point out the means for improvement. I know that a feeling of what might be called indignation prevailed in the College immediately after the Pennsylvania and Yale games and I feel sure that some of it still exists, but to give expression to it would do a great deal of harm especially as it is, in my opinion...