Word: young
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...hockey teams of several of the leading Canadian colleges. The teams will probably line up as follows: HARVARD. CANUCKS. Gardner, l.e. r.e., Christy Hicks, l.c. r.c., Mabee Morgan, r.c. l.c., Churchill Paine, Hornblower, r.e. l.e., Wood Ford, c.p. c.p., McSweeney Willetts, p. p., Fullerton Washburn, g. g., Young...
...writer has in mind that character familiar to all of us and so deserving of sympathy. The energetic and able young man, who is careless enough to show his ability early in his career, finds himself at the end of his Junior year the secretary of this organization, the treasurer of that, a member of an executive committee of still another society, and probably implicated more or less in athletics at the same time. When he is finally chosen for a class committee in his last year, he will probably begin to realize the absurdity of the whole thing. First...
Turning to the question of the teaching staff, President Eliot pointed out that the selection of men teachers, with careful attention to their knowledge and ability to teach, is a peculiar quality of Radcliffe. Another advantage lies in the fact that most of them are comparatively young men, and, with few exceptions, the best time for the teacher is between the ages of 25 and 50. Radcliffe's greatest need lies in this. There ought to be a far greater fund for teachers' salaries, to permit of experimentation in developing the most appropriate courses for women...
...Germanistic Society of Chicago he will lecture on Schiller's "Words Conception in his Dramatic Masterpieces" and on "Intellectual Relations between America and Germany." On February 10, at the University of Columbus, Ohio, he will lecture on "Frederick Hebbel." The following day he will speak at Cornell on "The Young Goethe." On February 13 he will lecture before the Association of High School Teachers at New York on Goethe's "Iphigenia" and "Tasso." He will return to Cambridge February...
...Lowell expressed his grateful appreciation for the cordial greeting. The office to which he has been as yet only nominated he considers of the greatest importance in the development of the United States, for the welfare of the country is dependent on the character and efficiency of the young men, which are being moulded in our colleges. His concern for them is as much for their associations with each other in a high and ideal atmosphere as for the things which are taught and learned. Expressions of his opinions on various subjects in the newspapers he advises to be discredited...