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Linder was born in Newton, Massachusetts. He fitted for college at the Newton High School and at Mr. Cutler's private school, and entered Harvard with the class of ninety-five. While he has been in college, Linder has made many friends, to whom his death comes as a sudden and painful blow. His cheerful disposition and manly bearing attracted to him many who did not know him intimately and to these as well as to his closer friends, his death is a sad loss. In temperament he was so quiet and unassuming that it is not until...
...University will be deeply grieved to learn of the sudden death of Frank Bolles, who died of pneumonia yesterday afternoon at his home on Berkeley street...
...figures do not show a startling increase and their significance does not lie in the fact that they point to a sudden revulsion of feeling in favor of Harvard. They simply indicate the beginning of what will probably be a steady wideninging of the field from which Harvard will draw her students. To discover this just at this time is particularly gratifying for it shows that the skeptics and conservatives all over the country who have looked with grave concern on Harvard's elective system and noncompulsory attendance at chapel are beginning to see that these are steps in advance...
Admitting the evil, which seems perfectly obvious, how is it to be done away with? We have said that no rule can justly be passed. The remedy cannot be a sudden one, subverting the whole system at one blow. It seems to us that the cure lies rather in a slow but steady raising of the standard of college honor. Not many years ago there was little opposition to practical jokes in the class room or to the most open cheating in examinations. The jokes have gone and the petty cheater is now looked upon as mean and contemptible. These...
...Edward Everett Hale preached last night in Appleton Chapel from two texts taken from the nineteenth Psalm: "The heavens declare the glory of God," and "The law of the Lord is perfect, converting the soul." In the middle of this psalm there is a sudden change-the first part tells how all God's works in the heavens and on earth praise Him, while the second shows the relation of God to man. Here, as in many others of the more beautiful psalms, are connected together the infinite and the finite; the infinite works of God and the finite nature...