Word: esteeming
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...lecture this evening on "Medicine as a Profession," is sure to be interesting and valuable, if we may judge from the circumstance that it is to be delivered by one who has won high esteem and well-deserved success both in practicing and in teaching medicine. The medicine, as a profession, is every year receiving more attention, and it has already gained for itself a position among the highest and noblest callings open to young men. But with the increasing dignity and worth, the difficulty of success has also increased. Not every one can now make a living, much less...
Harvard University School of Veterinary Medicine, Session 1887-87. - We esteem it a privilege and a pleasure to call the attention of all interested in the welfare and advancement of veterinary science to the announcement of the Harvard University School of Veterinary Medicine, Session 1886-87. This time honored institution of learning, whose fame is world-wide in all that relates to science and art, has, in connection with its Medical department, established a Veterinary School, presided over by a veterinarian of rare accomplishment, ripe judgment, and unlimited practical experience - qualifications that are exceptionally beneficial in directing the course...
...hopes of gaining money must be thrown aside. Harvard abounds in rich young men whose eyes ought to be opened to the possibilities of entering upon a course of purely theoretical labor, in which they may not only find personal satisfaction, but also gain the gratitude and the esteem of their more unfortunate brother laborers, whose energies are wasted either in the practice of their profession, or in teaching to numskulls the elements of a noble science. A very eminent physician once said to a wealthy young man who was undecided whether to start a chemical factory or to follow...
...change, and Brown only needs to have her sister colleges lead the way ere she too leaves the present league to join the new. Supposing that Harvard, Yale and Princeton always will have the first three places in the league, we cannot see why the smaller colleges should esteem fourth place in the present league at all less dignified than first place in the proposed smaller eague. To be first in an inferior league, because it seems difficult to be first in the larger league, is a motive that results from a thoroughly false idea of what...
...before, and often, too, against the further continuance of the custom. Yet the fact remains that "Bloody Monday," though not the night of terror that it once was, is still a Cambridge institution. Whether or not it will die out entirely, or will still hold its place in the esteem of upper-classmen, remains to be seen...