Word: landed
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...Outlooks." To see ourselves as others see is always profitable, but it becomes something more, when it is with the discriminating sympathetic perception which Mr. Brawley brings to bear on us and our institutions. We should be spared much of the criticism to which Harvard is treated throughout the land if more of our friends were to put themselves at Mr. Brawley's unprejudiced point of view...
...English 55 Mathematics 5 Geology A Mining 16 Geology 1 Philosophy 16 German C Philosophy 21a German 1b Spanish 5 Tuesday, January 28. (III) Anthropology 5 German B Anthropology 9 German 2b Architecture 1c Greek A Class. Philol. 40 Greek BI Class. Philol. 60 History 12a Economics 12 Land. Arch. 4 Economics 16a Latin 1 Engineering 1a Latin 6 English 2 Mineralogy 2 Fine Arts 5 Music 6 Forestry 7 Philosophy 12 French 2aIII, IV, V Semitic 1 French 2c Semitic 3a French 11 Zoology 4 Geology 19 Wednesday, January 29. (I) Astronomy 1 Greek 7 Greek E Physics...
...oldest University in the land, Harvard has perhaps the fewest traditions. Probably that is for the best, for this University has always stood for freedom of thought and action. But certain observances which exert an unconscious influence upon all who live under them are not inconsistent with true freedom. When opportunities for these arise, let us not be ashamed to display an interest in them, whether the interest is prompted by mere sentiment or by a deeper realization of that which lies behind the public expression...
...strictly speaking, the "show" that brings beggars "astraddle of the guys what's got the dough." I question also whether the dialect is used quite consistently throughout. In any case, it seems regrettable that the phrase "bunched up" should occur twice in fourteen lines. E.E. Hunt's sonnet, "Cloud-land," is compact and musical, and induces in the reader a mood as sympathetic as the writer's with a rustic scene in the mountains. I could wish there were less alliteration, and a less conspicuous contrast between the homeliness of "celebrate" and "move along," and the ornateness of "snow-jacinth...
...telling. Better far is Mr. Whitman's "Morning with the Army." Though if one remembers aright, it is not so good as some of his other "small-boy" stories. Mr. Biddle's "His Last Resort" is cleverly conceived and told, but too improb- able even though laid in a land broader-minded than...