Word: particularizes
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...goes without saying that members of this year's Freshman class are welcome to attend regularly or not; as they please. No one will reproach them if they do not; no particular appeals have been advanced to them to attend. The Chapel is there, the preachers are there; whether they go or not is a matter of importance to the freshmen only. The principle that the less college men are compelled to do and the more they do on their own account the better, is an abiding one at Harvard. It applies to the Chapel. Those freshmen who can truly...
...Papa Bonelli" gave some excellen character touches. All that can be done to "put the play across" the company does, and we can only place ourselves with the host of Miss Anglin's friends who regret that she should be wasting her splendid powers and company on this particular speciment of the conventional French melodrama...
...kinds of attractions were offered to members of the Institute. First, there were the so-called Round Table conferences, eight or nine in number, each meeting three or four times a week. They were held in the morning hours. Each of these Round Tables devoted its meetings to a particular subject, such as "Present Problems of Latin America", "Present Day Tariff Problems", "International Law", "The New Frontiers in Europe", or "The New States in Europe". These Round Tables were conducted by Mr. Norman Davis, late assistant secretary of state, Dr. L. S. Rowe, a prominent economist, Professor J. S. Reeves...
...feeling of antagonism against the courts, and in particular against the Supreme Court, has long been brewing in the minds of Labor men, and it found very definite expression at the time of the Supreme Court's decision in favor of the U. S. Steel Corporation last spring. The result of the long fermentation is the "specific recommendation" quoted above...
...learned Europeans regard our current passion for attempting to teach in our colleges subjects that are far better learned in the school of experience." While students for the ministry, medicine, law, and the teaching profession have long found preparation at college, the modern university -- the state university in particular -- has added to its other activities a score of quasi-technical fields unthought of a century ago. The sciences, business, engineering, and agriculture, to cite a few examples, have now been accorded a place in academic life; the industries are drawing upon the university for laboratory-research men, for construction experts...