Word: reads
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...exchange wants to know "whether our colleges turn out gentlemen." Certainly not; the gentlemen are allowed to go on and graduate. - [Ex.] We print the above and think it should be admired on account of its antiquity. Had Oscar read the college papers he would have recognized in this a veritable ruin...
...blue sky. But in the busy round of work we have scarcely time to watch nature's doings, and only when she flings a glorious day like this in our very faces do we stop to wonder and admire. Just now we have on the tapis a course of readings from Shakspere, by Prof. R. R. Raymond, the first of which was to have been given this evening, but was postponed on account of Prof. Raymond's illness. He is to read "Julius Caesar," "Henry IV," "Much Ado About Nothing" and "The Winter's Tale." We are particularly anxious...
...well-known professors in philosophy has been in the habit for some time past, of having the men of his courses come to his house separately, after an examination, and read their blue-books to him. Although this is done to save the professor's eyes, at the same time the practice combines many very material advantages. For although almost every one is dissatisfied with the result accomplished on an examination paper, or with the mark returned, there is usually no method of finding out in what one was right or wrong. This is especially true of those more indefinite...
...last number of the Dartmouth contains an article on "Hanover Gas." We do not know whether it refers to the editorials of the Dartmouth or not. We did not read it through...
...Higginson lectured before the Roseland Club, of North Cambridge, Thursday evening on "How to Read History...