Word: heartly
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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General Armstrong explained that by educating the Indian, he meant not only educating his mind, but his hand and heart as well; everything, in fact, that would enable him to compete with his white neighbor, in the struggle for existence. The trouble had been that the government had never understood the Indian. They had provided him with food and clothing, thereby enabling him to live in idleness, and it is no wonder that now he is unable to support himself. Instead of giving him rations, he should have been given land and farming implements and obliged to earn...
...seemed to be the feeling that a club should be formed, whose principal objects should be to make the new Exeter men coming to Cambridge acquainted with the alumni already down here, and to show men at Exeter that the graduates of the school have its best interests at heart. A committee of five men-one from the Law School and one from each class-was appointed to draw up a constitution for the club, and to present to the club at its next meeting other matters which required immediate decision. The following men compose the committee: W. C. Boyden...
Towle and Redmund will read the essays at the physiological conference of the first class, to be held next Monday morning. The former will read a paper on "The Vagus of the Heart," and the latter will treat of "The Physiological Action of Alcohol...
...Odyssey marked the beginning of the literature of all Europe, and through all the ages since they have been the same living poems that they are to us now. It is almost impossible for us to conceive the influence which the poems of Homer has upon the minds and hearts of the Greeks. At first it was their privilege to learn these poems only from recitals. Not on this account, however, was there any lack of opportunity to gain a knowledge of the stories of the Iliad and the Odyssey. On every occasion possible- at games, at feasts, at public...
...Monthly. It is a study of the laws of criticism with an estimate of the influences of Saints Beuve upon Matthew Arnold. The writer's words impress upon us the dignity of the work of the true critic. The thoughts of Mr. Carpenter deserve to be taken to heart...