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Word: minds (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1890-1899
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Usage:

...that it will take no measures tending to harm any sport at Harvard. This principle, on which the athletic committee is working, accounts for the breaking of the New England rule for the benefit of the H. A. A. If this policy of the athletic committee be borne in mind, it will be seen that there is no inconsistency when the committee allows the H. A. A. to compete in New York, and at the same time adheres strictly to the rule with baseball and football. It is possible for the baseball and football teams to meet, within New England...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 2/18/1891 | See Source »

...University of Cleveland, O., was elected to fill the vacancy. Professor Palmer was graduated at the Western Reserve in 1879 and has long been at the head of the department of German in that institution. Although a comparatively young man, Prof. Palmer is a man of great breadth of mind and extraordinary critical ability. His ten years' experience as a professor on the Western Reserve and his erudition well fit him for his duties at Yale, which he will begin next September...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Yale's New Professor. | 2/18/1891 | See Source »

...coming in contact with the instructor? Thsi intimacy with the great characters of the college is not the least of the benefits of a college course. It is in this light that we may look at the present set of college conferences. Some of the broadest minded men of the university are among those that lecture at the conferences, and if the students only bore this in mind, not only would these lecturers have the satisfaction of talking to respectably large audiences, but also the students would derive an immense benefit from this noble and varied intercourse...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Communication. | 2/17/1891 | See Source »

...feeling of Tonality consists in the expectation, in the mind of a listener to msuic, of the sound of a note of a certain pitch. This tension of expectancy requires to be resolved at all the points of rest in the music and at its close. Tonic structure consists in the return of a composition at these moments to a note whose image its previous course has awakened in the mind in this form of latent anticipation. There is evidence that the habitude of awaiting the sound of a certain note was a feature of the music of the early...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Mr. Gilman's Lecture on Music. | 2/12/1891 | See Source »

...work Dr. Gray always had in mind one high end. He never considered that Natural History was out of keeping with religion. Mere classification he always considered as dead work...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Asa Gray. | 2/10/1891 | See Source »

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