Word: formed
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...instruction do not tolerate the imposition of any one set of views upon the students. The method of the teachers of Political Economy is therefore to call the attention of their students to both sides of each question that comes up, by which means the men are enabled to form their own opinions...
...John T. Morse is exercised over the annual graduation from Harvard of a "solid phalanx of free-traders," he should rather attack the spirit of the university which enables men to form their own decisions, than advocate the appointment of professors of Protection, whose aim would be to impose upon Harvard students certain doctrines opposed to the results of those students' reasoning...
...raising the needed funds. The matter was then discussed and it was decided that the best way to find out the sentiment of the university was to call a mass meeting to be addressed by men in college especially well qualified to speak on the matter. The following undergraduates form the general committee at whose call the mass meeting will be announced: From '90-P. S. Abbot, T. W. Balch, T. S. Bradlee, R. D. Brown, F. F. Causey, H. Chalfant, R. I. Crocker, S. Dexter, 1st., H. P. Magoun, G. Norman, R. F Parker, J. C. Rolfe; from...
...because he has a perfectly fair frame of mind. Provincial people on the other hand are unused to the jar and noise of the city, wonder at strange sights, shudder at crime and are shocked by vice. They cannot look at disturbances with equanimity and are more likely to form more intense convictions and to be moved by a sterner purpose than the careless city people. Their firmness of purpose makes them often greater and more stirring characters. They are narrow but powerful. Jesus Christ was narrow in this sense so were most other great...
Stroke. Goddard, '92, 180 pounds. Rows very smoothly and easily but lacks firmness and form. Apt to carry his head low at full reach and to hunch up his shoulders. Hangs a little. Unsteady at the finish, does not bring himself up sharply and definitely. Drops his hands into his lap but shoots them out well and sharply. Uses his slide well but inclined to slide...