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Word: impressively (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...time, trouble, and his problems must be worked out for him in advance. Therefore the business man will always ask these questions: "What will the project cost? Will it pay? Where is the money coming from?" The engineer must be able to answer these and at the same time impress upon his employer the necessity of the future growth of the enterprise. Furthermore he must be able to make recommendations, graphic charts, and reports which will convince a board of directors that the project will be a success. In other words, the engineer must have a constructive and administrative mind...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: MR. BATCHELDER'S LECTURE | 5/14/1912 | See Source »

Today the Senior buttons are to be put on sale. The CRIMSON hardly needs to impress on the members of the Senior class the importance of each man's obtaining a button and wearing...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: SENIOR BUTTONS. | 2/20/1912 | See Source »

...what the CRIMSON wants to impress on undergraduates for the rest of this week is, first, that Harvard has only a fighting chance, and not a shade more; second, that to hit that chance is going to require the most enthusiastic determined moral support at mass meetings or other demonstrations of that same spirit; and, third, that in the Stadium on Saturday there must be a real power behind the team to give it that drive necessary to defeat such an antagonist as Yale will surely prove...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: A FIGHTING CHANCE. | 11/20/1911 | See Source »

Technology, therefore, ceased considering the Riverbank site; but the fact that Cambridge might have secured that institution, and thereby added directly to the taxable value of the land between the Riverbank and the Grand Junction Railroad, began to impress the intelligent business men of Cambridge. Nothing could be more desired than that the Cambridge side of the Back Bay Basin, on which millions of dollars have been spent, should be occupied by monumental buildings, worthy of the location and of the city. Here was the opportunity, when an institution of great reputation throughout the United States would erect such buildings...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Harvard and the City of Cambridge | 6/13/1911 | See Source »

...tutor's seminar is doubtless better than no preparatory review at all. Yet a review of any real value to a man is something that he can do best for himself. Just as the act of note-taking in the first instance seems to impress the subject matter of a lecture upon the memory, so the process of reviewing and boiling down notes makes the reviewer at home with the entire field before him. The result is directly proportionate to the effort. The man who leaves the compilation and preparatory work to the tutor deprives himself of the most essential...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: TUTORING FOR EXAMINATIONS. | 6/3/1911 | See Source »

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