Word: live
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...sure to be very unsatisfactory. In the first place the college will have to get up at some unearthly hour in the morning to get a place in the line, or else hire some small boy to stand in the line over night. As for the graduates who live out of Cambridge, they cannot come out here so early, and it is a wrong system which makes them go to the expense of hiring men to stand in the line. Then even after the line is formed, as we all know from the sale of seats for the Springfield game...
...little importance. What he says about the tendency of college men to neglect the affairs of the present day, is in a degree, true. There must always be in a college to a greater or less extent, the danger of monasticism, of seclusion from the outside world to live the life of the little university community. The cry against the impractical side of a college education has its ground largely in this: that whereas a college man knows the theories on which the world should be run, and knows how men have run it in the past, when he comes...
...forming a college settlement at Prospect House, and at last, through the interest which Mrs. Agassiz has taken in the movement, about $220 has been subscribed for the furnishing of a room and the expenses of men who undertake the work there. It is expected that students will live there for a week or a fortnight at a time, and their close association with the men will enable them to do much better work than would otherwise be possible. The Union has now been in existence a little more than a year, its work being confined almost entirely to education...
...Independent be an honest one. Sometimes a man's highest duty is to separate from his party. Frequently he must subordinate his own wishes and ideas to his party. Whether partisan or Independent try to be just and to see things as they are. Live the life of year time and fight the world's battles...
...Shippen '60, in which he states some facts concerning the Seattle Harvard Club which will be interesting because of their significance. In the first place it is remarkable that in a place so recently founded as Seattle a Harvard Club exists at all; a spirit of loyalty and of live interest is shown by this, which is decidedly gratifying and important. The club was organized last July and has now a membership of thirty. Meetings, which have been held quarterly, have been addressed by Mr. Shippen on the "Foundation of Harvard," and by Mr. Geo. H. Hickborn on "Harvard...