Word: young
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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Since leaving Oxford, Dr. Bull has preached to assemblies of young men in various parts of England. As a chaplain in the British army he has seen active service in India. He was later appointed to a prominent clerical position in the Royal Navy...
Jarvis Field at 3.30 o'clock--F. T. Frelinghuysen 3L. and C. S. Cutting '12 vs. R. MacVeagh 1L. and G. Biddle 2L., G. Burt 2L. and M. Griswold 3L. vs. F. W. Young Sp. and H. H. Murchie 1L., E. R. Brumley 3L. and J. Reynolds 3L. vs. S. P. Hall '10 and C. H. Wolfe '10, H. L. Clark, Asst. and E. H. Wilkins, Instr. vs. F. F. A. Pearson '11 and H. Nickerson...
...life work. Mr. Phillips has himself contributed towards raising the standard of both our consular and diplomatic services. Mr. Tinckom-Fernandez has a pleasant and facile swing in his Ballad of Harvard Square. His verse suggests Kipling, who has, above all writers of our time, caught the fancy of young poets and story-tellers. A story by Mr. Van Rensselaer, The Corward, also has a suggestion of Kipling, but more in the story than the style. The author could well try rewriting The Coward many times; at the end it should be very effective. Corners in York, by Mr. Huckel...
...means of one mind in regard to it, and their views are of course based largely upon experience. Our Law School lays great stress upon native ability and scholarly aptitude, and comparatively little upon the particular branches of learning a student has pursued in college. Any young man who has brains, and has learned to use them, can master the law, whatever his intellectual interests may have been; and the same thing is true of the curriculum in the Divinity School. Many professors of medicine, on the other hand, feel strongly that a student should enter their school with...
...Young...