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Word: professionality (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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EDITORS HERALD-CRIMSON.-The usual spirit of the legal profession-that of taking advantage of circumstances without regard to justice-is developing very early in the present members of the Law School. For it seems very unjust toward the undergraduate classes for that department of the university to abstain from...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: COMMUNICATIONS. | 1/21/1884 | See Source »

...presence of a professional in this sense, however, on the college grounds, if a man of good character might be productive of less harm than intercourse with technical amateurs of lower character. But this did not affect the faculty's position. Their objection was to the introduction of professional methods and spirit into college sports. The two should be totally divorced. It seems for this reason that the faculty objected to employing for temporary periods any professional trainer. If such a trainer, however, had renounced the pursuit of his profession he would no longer be considered a professional within...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: CONFERENCE ON ATHLETICS. | 1/21/1884 | See Source »

...less definite idea of the views held by some of the more influential members of the faculty, and presumably therefore by the faculty in general. We also hope that the knowledge by the faculty of the views of a large proportion of the students on the matter of professionalism as expressed at the conference by the president of the athletic association and others may be of use in bringing about a better mutual understanding on both sides. In our issue of the morning preceding the recent conference we took occasion to criticise some portions of President Eliot's annual report...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 1/21/1884 | See Source »

...addressed: "Is it an honorable thing for you to cut prices, for services at your hospital, 100 per cent less than the regular practitioner charges; less than those your own graduates will have to charge on order to make a loving, or to keep on collegiate terms with other professional?" In proof that his question is founded on fact, he submits various figures going to show that the school is offering to work much cheaper that a professional could, which looks as if the school was "trying to run the veterinary profession of Boston and vicinity into the ground...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: HARVARD VETERINARY SCHOOL. | 1/5/1884 | See Source »

But still, while we think that no one's motives ought to be impugned, it is an entirely imaginable case that the school may be unjustly interfering with the veterinary profession, if it takes away their cases by charging fifty per cent. less for its services than members of the...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 1/5/1884 | See Source »

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