Word: minds
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...convinced that Northfield should not be avoided as being "too full of religion" or having an unattractive form of it. On the contrary, it is most attractive, and the most forceful indication of this is that many men who go for the first time in a skeptical frame of mind return the next year full of enthusiasm...
...December Dr. Grenfell's lecture on "Labrador". Later in the month, Mr. Underwood's illustrated talk, "Hunting with Canoo and Camera in New Brunswick" proved to be an example of the very best of its kind. Mr. William J. Burns need scarcely be mentioned to call to mind the enthusiastic crowd which greeted this presence in the Living Room. Nor should we fail to notice that three of the departments in which Harvard ranks high--medicine, the law, and engineering--have within a very few weeks been admirably discussed by Dr. Cabot, Dean Thayer, and Professor Dugald C. Jackson...
...Progessive Movement by Theodore Roosevelt '80; following this, is a short poem by Mr. Hagedorn '07, who until this year was an instructor in the English Department; Professor Albert Bushnell Hart '80 has contributed an article on "Gideon Welles's Diary," and Percy Mackaye '97 has called to our mind Professor Copeland's reading of "Bouillabaisse," by contributing a poem in memory of its author Thackeray, "The Bard of Bouillabaise," on his centenary. We might flatter ourselves further and take to our credit a story by Edwin Balmer, Ph.D., '03, and still further, an interview which Mr. Leupp has secured...
...mind goes back to "Alaric Jourdan's House." Without in any way disparaging the efforts of the earnest and sincere young people concerned in the other pieces, to Mr. Townsend, Miss Gragg, Mr. Woodward and Mr. Searle the honors of the Club's spring production go. EARL DERR BIGGERS...
...cannot close our eyes, however, to the deduction that any College student might naturally draw from the Herald's conclusion, i.e. that earnest intellectual effort in College has after all little effect upon intellectual achievement in the Law School, and that if a man only makes up his mind to work hard i the Law School, it makes little difference whether he has worked hard, or not at all, in College. This is an opinion which has long been current, but which was conclusively exploded by President Lowell over a year ago. For this reason we take issue with...