Word: warningly
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...your proper work in life. If you employ both arms in that game you will be in danger of stooping; in danger of losing your soul. But in spite of every thing you may succeed, you may be successful, you may acquire enormous wealth. In which case I warn you that you stand in grave danger of being spoken and written of and pointed out as a smart man. And that is one of the most terrible calamities that can overtake a sane, civilized white man in our empire today...
...from college spirit, or friendship with their editors. We wish, however, that Lampy could be persuaded to dismiss the slave and wring the Ibis's neck. It would spare us and him much in point of soliloquies about his menage, which we doubt not sounds as dull in his warn...
There is now one large Committee of Advisers, made up out of the three former Committees of Advisers to Freshmen, Special Students, and Lawrence School students. The purpose of this committee, under the present administration, is not to summon and warn delinquent students, but to give advice on studies at the beginning of the year, or whenever a change is made, and also to help any man who feels the need of advice in regard to his College life. The Advisers have no desire or leisure to force their help and counsel on men who have chosen their studies...
...wish to warn every man in the University who is on any athletic squad, or who intends to try for a team in the future, that he must keep up in his studies and be absolutely regular in attending lectures while in Cambridge. Failure to do this on the part of a few men has injured the chances of a number of University and Freshman teams this year. The worst example this spring has been the 1908 crew. Two of the men in the first boat got on probation after the season had begun, and this loss necessitated a general...
...warn people of impending explosions is a much more difficult question. Dr. Jaggar read several extracts from St. Pierre papers, showing that the French scientists again and again concluded that Mt. Pelee was no longer dangerous, only to be terribly deceived. The intervals and character of the eruptions of Mt. Pelee give a basis for a calculation that the French disregarded. The first explosion was on May 3, and explosions of increasing violence came on May 8, May 20, June 6, July 9, and August 30--that is, at intervals of five, twelve, seventeen, thirty-three and fifty- two days...