Word: successfully
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...order to make it a success, however, it should not be left to private zeal. The work should be made a regular department of the library under the charge of an efficient head. Many students could be found, who would be only too glad to assist. Special papers could be assigned to each one interested, and the entire work thus systematized...
...element in true university prosperity. The position of a college depends greatly on the stamp of the average student. That college which attracts the ambitious, zealous young men of our country will, in the future, be the leading college. Wealth, fortunate location, and noted professors contribute much to the success of any college, but a generation of earnest, ambitious students will do more toward this end than all the other causes combined. The following, then, seems to be a just criterion of the advisability of these new reforms. If the tearing down of the old barriers to entrance...
Thursday evening, the Amherst Alumni held a dinner at Young's. Many alumni were present, and the dinner was in every respect a notable success...
...freshman class has failed to do its full share toward the success of the winter meetings. From a class of its size the college naturally expects,-and rightly, too,-a large number of entries. It is true that eighty-eight made a good showing at the field meetings of last fall, and that the number of its men at present working with the candidates for the Mott Haven team is gratifying; yet the college is justified in expecting each freshman class to come forward and contribute its share towards making a success of the gymnasium meeting, and this eighty-eight...
...referred to the advisability of such a course of lectures for Harvard, and the sight of the above notice encourages us to again broach the subject. There are always large numbers of men here who intend to enter journalism, and their work would be vastly helped, and their success made far more probable, if some attention were given to them. The chronic poverty of the college seems to put out of the question any hope of the establishment of a regular course for this purpose. But we can see no reason why some journalist of recognized ability and experience should...