Word: without
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Dates: during 1900-1900
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...student who is not in the examination room within five minutes after the hour appointed for the examination, shall not be admitted without permission of the instructor or of the officer in general charge of the examinations." Examinations Today. Indo-Iranian 1, Warren House. Latin A, Sever 35. Class. Phil. 54, Sever 35. English 13, Sever 5. German 11, Sever 5. Slavic 3, Sever 5. Philosophy 4a, Sever 35. Fine Arts 2. Sever 35. Mathematics 26 Lower Mass. Engineering 1b, Upper Mass. Chemistry 4, Lower Mass. Geology 15, Univ. Mus. 2. 2.30 p. m. Latin E, Sever 29. Latin...
...minds already turned towards the study of a profession, but Phillips Brooks came rather to get a liberal education. Simple and companionable, he was capable of sympathy with all human interests. His note-books show that he was a much deeper man than even his most intimate friends realized. Without any of the eccentricities of genius, Phillips Brooks stood out as the great normal man, beside whom others seemed small. He was always an optimist, because he was a devout Christian, and he was always ready to pour this spirit into men who were lacking in religion. Though successful...
...communication published in last Saturday's CRIMSON, stating that the writer removed a reserved book from the Library "to finish up a pressing piece of work during the night hours" without any intention "of retaining it at the expense of other students," suggests a question as to whether the removal of a book for over-night use could possibly do any harm to other students or to the Library. Of course, as the rule now stands, it would be impossible to justify anyone in removing a reserved book under any circumstances, since it involves the deliberate breaking of a Library...
...opinion that life is not long enough to justify an expenditure of time that prevents a man from being fitted for his life work until he is twenty-six. The college must be a place of freedom with responsibility. It invokes danger, but manhood and character cannot be developed without the element of danger, and it is, therefore, not a fit place for everybody. But to counteract this danger, the strongest influences are provided...
...conclusion, Dean Smith asserts that the classics will be necessary in the college of the future since it is a question not of need, but of excellence, and education is not complete without a knowledge first hand of the life and thought of two peoples from whom our own thought has sprung...