Word: man
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...port side of the boat. Filley at stroke can be relied upon. Although New hall at four is inexperienced, he has shown aptness to learn as well as endurance and strength. At seven Meier has not improved as much as was expected, and Lawson at five, although the best man for his position, is unsteady. Many of the faults which were brought out by the Cornell race have been remedied...
...attention to the disappearance of certain books from the reading room of Boylston Hall. This reading room is maintained practically by the students of the Division of Chemistry for mutual benefit. Supposing that these books have not been taken by an ordinary, thief, there remains the probability that some man has taken them, in order that he may have the unrestricted use of them. To do this at any time is a disregard of the rights of others which one hopes not to find in this community. To do this in the midst of, examinations, perhaps preventing some man...
Part 3. Each man must spend a certain amount of time in individual work in a mining district to be selected by himself with the approval of the Chairman of the Department. For those who have gone on the excursion the time required will be two weeks; for others, five weeks...
...that it matters at all whether it does or not. But the opposition to the settlement within the University is another matter. The cry of undergraduates for harsher punishment for an undergraduate; the echo in the Bulletin of "the charge that in Harvard College the rich man is treated better than the poor"; are not a little depressing. "The government of a University," says ex-Dean Briggs, "cannot with safety be entrusted to students; they are harsher than their elders and less just to persons whom they dislike." For my part, I would rather be caught, at twenty, lifting...
...done by the co-operation of a good many minds, in different stages of development, and that co-operation is much easier secured under pressure of some urgent inducement. There is everything to be gained by the Dean's plan, and nothing to be lost which any generous man would not lose eagerly. The suggestion that the dignity of the College will suffer is nonsense. That the Boston Herald should believe that the Med. Fac. wont keep its word is natural enough; but it will keep its word absolutely and unquestionably, and if there are undergraduates who do not know...