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...French, B. A. A., 11; A. Johnson, 12; A. Latham, 16; W. A. D. Short, 12; V. Mowry, W. A. C., 6; M. Ladd, 14; P. T. Jackson, 3rd, 12; E. W. Allen, Y. A. A., 2; E. C. Ellis, 12; W. E. Greenough, 14; F. W. Lord, B. A. A., 14; S. L. Friedenburg, 14; J. E. Good, Y. A. A., 10; S. A. Coombs, B. A. A., 8; O. K. Hawes, 2; M. H. Guerin, 15; C. C. Hyde, 12; F. E. Lowell, 16; C. E. Bucholz, M. I. T., 13; E. W. Pinkham, 10; G. Abbott...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Handicaps for the Games of May 7. | 5/6/1892 | See Source »

...Shead, 2; B. Hurd, Jr., B. A. A., 2; H. M. Wheelwright, 2; J. Crane, Jr. B. A. A., 7; P. J. Finnerman, B. A. A., 7; E. L. Andrews, M. I. T., scratch; H. C. Moffit, B. A. A., owes 2 yds.; F. W. Lord, B. A. A., 7; G. R. Fearing, Jr., 12; M. Van Ingen, Y. A. A., 7; K. Brown, 2; T. C. Smith, scratch; H. T. Harding, M. A. C., owes 4 yds.; A. F. Copeland, M. A. C., 12. These are penalties, not handicaps; the best men start 12 yds. behind the actual starting...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Handicaps for the Games of May 7. | 5/6/1892 | See Source »

...yards hurdle race, O. W. Shead '93 (10 yds.), H. M. Wheelwright '94 (8 yds.) were both heat winners, but lost in the final. In this event F. W. Lord of the "Tech." who won third, broke the M. I. T. record by winning his heat in 17 2-5 sec. Of the ten trial heats of the 100 yards dash, nine were won by the following Harvard men: B. S. Prest '95, (8 yds.), 10 1-5 s.; E. W. Pinkham '92, (8 yds.) 10 2-5 s.; E. S. Bach...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The B. A. A. Games. | 4/25/1892 | See Source »

...many methods of memorizing such as by writing down, or relating an event immediately after it has happened are practically valueless to the majority of people. In Lord Bacon's definition of education, one approximates the true theory. Education, he says, is the cultivation of a just and legitimate familiarity between mind and things. Professor Loisette advocates what he has named the analytic synthetic method. In memorizing a passage, he reduces it to the simplest statement and then by gradually adding the modifying phrases he learns the whole by association. This is the secret of his system - association - which, combined...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Professor Loisette's Lecture. | 4/19/1892 | See Source »

...first work, while at Trinity College, Cambridge, was so severely criticized by Lord Brougham in the Edinburgh Review that he was stung into power. His Satire published the next year brought him recognition...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Mr. Black's Lecture. | 4/14/1892 | See Source »

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