Word: labor
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...naturally enough, that I have little time for the work which I have promised the college to do. Consequently this work has often been driven into the night; I am in danger of breaking down, and am told that I must either leave Cambridge soon or find hours for labor and hours for rest...
...political economy department of the college deserves much praise for the care and work displayed in the first number of the Quarterly Journal of Economics. The magazine appears in an attractive form, the type and the size of the pages making the labor of reading as small as possible. All the articles are written with a grasp which betokens a complete understanding of the questions involved, while also they discuss problems that are more interesting to the unprofessional reader than are most of those in the journals of a similar class. For in these latter technical points and little matters...
...instructor. Original research in historical work has become during the last few years an important factor in the Harvard curriculum, and although the method pursued in History 12 can hardly be dignified by the above name, yet it will no doubt prove a most beneficial course of labor for all who intend to take History 20 in future years. We must greet all such changes as those in History 12 with delight and satisfaction...
...found, when difficult financial problems are set before the general reader. The part of the magazine devoted to "Notes and Memoranda" contains, among other items, a short paper by F. Coggeshall, '86, on "The Arithmetic, Geometric, and Harmonic Means," and an article by H. M. Williams, '85, "Legislation for Labor Arbitration." Mr. Arthur Mungin writes a long letter from Paris concerning the present financial and economical condition of France. A list of recent publications on economical subjects is given, which will be found very useful to all engaged in special economic study and research. This list includes books, periodicals...
...surprise at the melody of his verse. The "Mood of an Autumn Day," by Mr. Berenson, is crude. It seems to prove that the writer's strength lies in prose. The first three lines are harsh, and "need the file." The thought, again, is obscure, and the lines often labor. "The Last of the Adventures," by Mr. Bruce, is not a powerful effort. It is direct, admirably written and picturesque, but it is disconnected. There is lacking something of that "swing" so peculiar to the writer's better work. A translation of the second epode of Horace, by Mr. Isham...