Word: generalizes
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...private houses in Lexington was decorated with Chinese lanterns in honor of the club. Here, after a few minutes rest the club sat down to a hearty supper. After supper, songs and speeches followed each other in quick succession. What with the informality of song and speech and the general jollity the time passed only too quickly. Among the songs Mr. Harrison's "Major Gilfeather" took and was encored over and again. The club owes its thanks to Mr. Mason for his kindness in acting as toastmaster. Finally after the songs and speeches were done and everybody was hoarse from...
...will be found possible to give another series of concerts by the Boston Symphony Orchestra in Sunders again this year, for the number in attendance evinced how fully they were appreciated, not only by the students, but also by those living in Cambridge. There is no means by which general education in music can be better spread, or love for it more carefully nurtured among men too busy to devote much time to it, than by the cheap concerts which are so high in point of excellence. It is claimed that they have a tendency to crowd out all other...
...surgeons of the two great hospitals in this city; sever 4 gentlemen not belonging to the medical profession, but warm personal friends of Dr. Bigelow; a few ladies who had been his patients, and all the surgical house-pupils who had ever been connected with the Massachusetts General Hospital during his long term of service at that institution, so far as they could be easily reached by personal application. The bust is given on the condition that it shall be place permanently in the new surgical lecture-room, which corresponds to the scene of Dr. Bigelow's long labors...
Today is the last day for entries for the general development prize. T. J. COOLIDGE, JR., President...
...Students may be divided into three general classes. First, those that regard the college and all that pertains to it as a great joke, to whom study is the varies stranger, and to whom time exists only to be killed, and the devil is usually at hand to help them kill it. Second are those who, while they appreciate the value of a college education, let a spirit of indolence or overweening interest in other matters draw them from their duties. The third class commonly known as 'digs,' are those who possess a stern sense of duty, or in whose...