Word: minds
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...These are very excellent and varied words," says the Victorian, "highly connetstive; some of them trip together delightfully; only, what do they mean?" Irresistibly the mind of the Victorian runs back to that first love affair of David Copperfield's, when Miss Shepherd, whom the Misses Nettingall outrageously stood in the stocks for turning in her toes, Miss Shepherd to whom as a token of affection he gave twelve Brazil nuts, "difficult to pack into a parcel of any regular shape; hard to crack even in room doors... and oily when cracked," was mistress of his heart. "At home...
...Accompanist. Mendelssohn, Trlo In D miner Allegro-Adagio-Finale M. F. Hall '15, Piano; A. S. Coolidge '15, Violin; L. B. Rossbach '15, Violincello. Doppler, Fantasie Pastorale E. H. Barry '15, Flute; H. W. Frost '15, Accompanist. Parker, a "The Lark now leaves his watery nest." Greig, b, "My mind is like a peak snow-covered." Strauss, c, "Morgen," A. F. Pickernell '14; H. W. Frost '14, Accompanist. Liszt, a, Etude in D-flat major b. Transcription of "Spinning Song" from Wagner's "Flying Dutchman." A. L. Moeldner '13 Dvorak, Polka and Polonaise, from Suite, op. 39. W. N. Hewitt...
Several of the articles discuss athletic problems with a view to discovering the elements of strength and weakness in various sports. These are symptomatic of the efforts of the undergraduate mind to solve the problems in which it is interested. The educational value of these efforts to analyse living, moving problems is easily overlooked by those whose interest centers in philological, historical, and mathematical problems. A genuinely broad mind, however, will not pronounce too hastily upon the comparative value of different kinds of mental effort, or effort devoted to the solution of different kinds of problems. If one finds...
...most explicit answer to the riddle of the Union's four-year decline in membership is, however, that up to within very recent years, it was impressed on the mind of every Freshman that he not only ought not but could not keep house without a Union membership. The habit was formed in cubdom, and persisted. This zeal, it is understood, has been abated, with the above result. Yet the plan of admitting the Union membership fee as an item on the term bill--which means that the bill comes not out of my allowance but out of father...
...follows: November 18, "The Problem and the Method." November 21, "The Idea of the Universal Community." November 25, "The Moral Burden of the Individual." November 27, "The Realm of Grace." December 2, "Time and Guilt." December 5, "Atonement," December 9, "The Christian Doctrine of Life." December 12, "The Modern Mind and the Christian Ideas...