Word: sargent
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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Junior (to unsuspecting Sophomore). - I suppose Sargent ordered you a salt bath, did n't he? He ought to have, of course...
...students need when exercising and after - for example, belts, slippers, towels, and the like - were kept there for sale, it would be a great convenience, and the establishment would no doubt be patronized by all. This could be done without any additional expense, and we learn from Dr. Sargent that the plan was suggested in the beginning, but the President thought it not advisable, then at least. Extras at Memorial, which all recognize as one of its best features, seems to be a similar case to this, and the great success of the late Mr. Titus shows that students will...
...appeared in our last issue has been questioned. In the article entitled "The Physical Examinations" we denied that there was a prevalence of heart complaint in College, and stated that of two hundred and fifty men only two were afflicted with that disease. Our information was obtained from Dr. Sargent, and upon further inquiry we are fully sustained by him in our position. We reiterate the statement that coffee-drinking and cigarette-smoking have not caused a prevalence of heart complaint among Harvard undergraduates...
April 1. Professor D. A. Sargent, "The Philosophy of Exercise...
...President Eliot's treatment of the subject of scholarship, in which open scholarships are strongly opposed and the present system commended. Mr. Arthur Gilman gives the origin of the Annex, and Professor N. S. Shaler a short account of the Natural History Society, while Dr. D. A. Sargent replies to recent criticism on the Hemenway Gymnasium by the press. Dr. B. Joy Jeffries contributes an article on Color-Blindness in Colleges. Professor F. H. Storer vindicates the utility of the Bussey Institute, and Professor Josiah D. Whitney writes at some length on the Museum of Natural History. The anonymous biographical...