Word: seemly
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...would certainly seem a most obvious fact that to put extra work on men just before the examination time is a great injustice to them, and a hindrance to whatever preparation they may be making for the examinations. Instructors ought to be very careful before they decide to do this. Extra work can but have a discouraging effect on the men who are hard pressed enough anyhow at this time, and it may make a serious difference with their standing if they take sufficient time from their preparation to do the work well, as the instructors of course desire. There...
...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 profession must do to support themselves. there ought to be room for both. It would seem as if some plan ought to be devised, if the school is to be run as a school, by which competition with outsiders could be avoided. It is certainly no part of a school's duties to enter into a sharp competition with a profession whose interests it proposes to advance...
...certainly to that effect. The seriousminded alumnus of the University of Virginia assumes a fine disdain for the lotus-eating students of Harvard, Yale and Columbia. If one may take the examinations propounded here as a criterion, every Northern collegian will doubtless be willing to admit that it cannot "seem always afternoon" to the University of Virginia student. These examinations, incredibly enough, occupy from six to fifteen hours and are said to average about ten. It is true that the utmost freedom is allowed, the young men can come and go as they please, they are subject to no espionage...
...fall that this steed prances forth, shedding about him the last feeble rays of his departing glory. Bravely assuming his heavy task, he urges on his faltering steps in an almost vain endeavor to drag a cumbersome snowplow through the mighty drifts. Spavined, aged, Lame, his case would surely seem to be one to provoke the pity and interference, if not of the college officers, then of some of the numerous societies formed for the protection of such as he. We will say nothing of the rumor that this animal, together with his companion in arms of apparently similar...
...always appealed strongly to collegians and college-bred men. It is then of peculiar interest to college men to witness the controversy that it now going on about the criticism which has just been pronounced on Mr. Emerson by a man almost equally famous, Mr. Matthew Arnold. It would seem as if a great number of Emerson's countrymen were unaware of the esteem and appreciation in which they held him, until they imagined an attempt was being made to lower him from his lofty place. Since then, nothing that could be said has been too extravagant to be uttered...