Word: higher
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...broadened; the requirements for admission to the Scientific School gradually raised to the level of the College requirements; the development of four-year programs affording thorough professional training in the several branches of applied science, including architecture and landscape architecture; the Graduate School established for the administration of the higher degrees in arts and sciences, and recognition given to the importance of the fostering of higher studies as the essential function of a university...
...Seniors emphasized the fundamentally incompatible character of secular and clerical education. Statistics show that the standard of the lay schools is higher than that of the religious institutions, and that attempts to reform the clerical methods are resented by the religious orders. Furthermore, the safety of the state demands homogeneity in the people which cannot be attained without homogeneity in education...
...following candidates for the degree of Bachelor of Arts in 1904, having attained a grade of A or B in at least nine courses--or their equivalent--and having attained also a grade of C or higher in as many courses as they are required to pursue for admission, without deficiency, to the Senior Class, are provisionally entitled to degrees with distinction and to Commencement Parts: R. R. Alexander. F. W. Johnston. C. E. Andrews, Jr. R. W. Kelse. Edward Auten, Jr. R. H. Keniston. William Badt. George Kenyon. A. A. Ballantine. W. C. Keough. F. V. Barstow. Moses King...
...combinations upon the condition of the American laborer; (4) The economic advantages and disadvantages of present colonial possessions to the mother country; (5) The causes of the panic of 1893; (6) What forms of education should be advised for the elevation of wage-earners from a lower to a higher industrial status in the United States; (7) What method of education is best suited for men entering upon trade and commerce...
...work of the ensemble was of a higher standard than in the past, and several of the leading parts were exceptionally well rendered...