Word: following
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...shall do it should be, in a certain sense, the reverse. The schools should so educate their pupils that, when the proper time comes, they will be able easily and naturally to enter college. There should be such a constant and even growth in preparatory education that college should follow naturally after the schools and students be fitted to enter without the necessity of being strictly questioned as to their fitness. There should be a natural sequence. Until this natural sequence comes there must be this false relation between the college and the preparatory schools...
...numbered seventeen and were divided into two crews. It is expected that many more candidates will turn out within the next few days. In connection with the work on the rowing machines, the usual gymnasium exercises and runs will be held. Among the list of candidates which follow will be noted the names of several of last years crew: G. E. Burgess, D. B. Duflield, A. N. Broughton R. G. Miller, A. Hale, Jr., H. Ware, F. Alle, S. E. Farwell, R. T. French, A. L. Cochrane, A. J. Bowie Jr., P. E. Tripp, G. Collamore, R. Bisbee...
Choose then at the beginning of this New Year which voice you will heed, which path you will follow. Now the paths are near together but they will rapidly diverge and soon will be separated by too wide a gulf to be crossed...
...Tuesday, December 27 at 2.30 at the Berkeley School Armory, No. 20 West 44th Street. Mr. George L. Rivers Columbia '68, will make the introductory remarks. J. Walter Smith, Harvard '94, will read a poem, and the presentation of the cup by Hon. Chauncey M. Depew, Yale '56 will follow...
Professor Albert B. Hart's book entitled "Formation of the Union, 1750.1829" makes the second volume of the Epochs of American History which he is editing himself. The volume aims to follow the principle "of the study of causes rather than of events, the development of the American nation out of scattered and inharmonious colonies." So great a development as this naturally is can be treated of course only in its elements in a volume as small as this, but Professor Hart has treated the subject in an interesting as well as an instructive manner. The various subjects of each...