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Word: caringly (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...care to discuss the value of the training afforded by any particular course of study, but we do think that in both instances the true purpose and meaning of a liberal college education is misunderstood. Are we here to prepare for our professions? Then what do the professional schools signify? What we want of Harvard College is not a summa cum laude or a diploma and degree, but the best liberal education that she can afford us. We cannot afford to graduate with the thought that our education is complete. It is only begun. What does "Commencement" mean...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 6/4/1884 | See Source »

Each contestant was required to wear a number on his back, so that the spectators were enabled to follow the course of the races very readily. The arrangements for the meeting had been made with great care, and reflect much credit on the gentlemen in charge. The officials were as follows: Referee, Prof. John Williams White; judges, Mr. W. H. Goodwin, '84, Mr. A. F. French, '85; time-keepers, Mr. J. G. Lathrop, Mr. E. A. Thompson, '87, Mr. Wendell Baker, '86; starter, Mr. J. S. Dean, L. S.; clerks of the course, Mr. W. D. Smith...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: HARVARD BICYCLE CLUB. | 6/2/1884 | See Source »

Tomorrow the Bicycle club will hold their annual races, using for the first time the new track on Holmes' field. The officers of the club have labored long and diligently to make the meet a success, and from the number of entries and the care with which the arrangements have been made, there can be but little doubt that the races of tomorrow will eclipse in interest all those previously held under the auspices of the club. Last year the club was compelled to resort to the track on Beacon Park, because the college would not allow the organization...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: HARVARD BICYCLE CLUB. | 5/30/1884 | See Source »

...supplemented by a college curriculum or manual labor it is the reading of books upon which we must found our cultivation. "Show me his books and I will tell you the man," is so true and invariably reliable that it is strange we do not take greater thought or care about what or how much we read. Some of us are bound to rank and marks, others to nothing, but how few of us have any definite method, beside cramming through a cunningly arranged series of examinations, by which to arrive as a higher intellectual sphere. Of course it only...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 5/27/1884 | See Source »

...paid on the first term bill under the item of "Laboratory supplies and damage of apparatus." Besides this, at the end of the year another fee is required to cover the cost of actual breakage made by each laboratory student. This fee varies with the care exercised by the student. On the last term bill it appears under the same item of expense as the first fee, and hence our correspondent's error. The last fee is for nothing but damages to apparatus and for any chemicals, besides the regular reagents used by the student. As a matter of fact...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 5/22/1884 | See Source »

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