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Word: generalizes (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...copies of printed Notes in Chemistry I. can be obtained at half price ($2.00) at 3 Grays. These notes are valuable for those wishing a general knowledge of the subject as well as for a text book in course...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: SPECIAL NOTICES. | 6/1/1883 | See Source »

...Strange to say, this goal was counted. Although Harvard played a wonderfully good game for the next ten minutes, no goals were secured, and Yale was declared the winner by a score of two to one. Yale excelled in running and body-checking, Harvard in handling the ball and general team-play. Cottell, McDowell, Spencer and Twombly, did good work, and Noble, Simson. Goodale and Nichols also played well. The Yale team played a very fair game, and did not try to win by delaying the game after they made their goals. Yale played very sharply in following the ball...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: LACROSSE. | 5/28/1883 | See Source »

EDITORS HARVARD HERALD: I have just sent out cards to all those who have not yet paid their subscriptions to the University Crew, and I hope the response will be prompt and general. I shall be in my room, No. 1 Holyoke street, every morning, from eleven to twelve, to receive payment for these subscriptions; any one who cannot come at that time may drop the money through my door or send it by post, and they will receive a prompt acknowledgement of its receipt. The duties of the treasurer of the crew are peculiarly arduous at this time...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 5/26/1883 | See Source »

...Cambridge, in the person of Prof. W. W. Goodwin. Your eminent Greek scholar is to receive the honorary degree of LL. D. at Cambridge on the 12th of June, in company with Sir John Lubbock, Matthew Arnold, M. Pasteur, the great French chemist; George F. Watts, the painter; General Menabrea, the Italian minister in London; Sir Alexander Grant, the principal of Edinburgh University, and other distinguished men. Professor Goodwin's honor is not only well deserved, but it is peculiarly appropriate as coming from Cambridge, where his books have been in use for several years, and where he has many...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 5/26/1883 | See Source »

...that an education of all the mental faculties is better for the scholars themselves and for the community than a narrow training for a special pursuit. Acting on their idea the founders of our colleges began their educational system not with schools for special training but with schools of general culture, and the staff of instructors were not specialists but men fit to teach others the rudiments of higher learning in which they had themselves been taught...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: PRESENT ASPECTS OF COLLEGE TRAINING. | 5/26/1883 | See Source »