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" ... residence here will allow. It is intended to maintain such a proportion between the different branches of literature and science, as to form a proper symmetry and balance of character. In laying the foundation of a thorough education, it is necessary... "
Sketches of Yale College: With Numerous Anecdotes, and Embellished with More ... - Page 77
by Ezekiel Porter Belden - 1843 - 192 pages
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The Quarterly Journal of the American Education Society, Volume 1, Issues 1-6

1829 - 258 pages
...cultivated, while others are neglected. A costly edifice ought not to be left to rest upon a single pillar. When certain mental endowments receive a much higher...is a distortion in the intellectual character. The mind never attains its full perfection, unless its various powers are so trained as to give them the...
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Quarterly Register and Journal of the American Education Society, Volumes 1-2

1829 - 532 pages
...edifice ought not to be kit to rest upon a single pillar. When certain mental endowments receive a mach higher culture than others, there is a distortion in the intellectual character. The mind never attains its full perfection, unless its various powers are so trained аз to give them...
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Annals of Yale College, in New Haven, Connecticut, from Its Foundation, to ...

Ebenezer Baldwin - 1831 - 348 pages
...education ; but to eommence a thorough course, and to carry it as far as the time of the students' residence here will allow. It is intended to maintain...distortion in the intellectual character. The powers of the mirid are not developed in their fairest proportions, by studying languages alone, or mathematics alone,...
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History of Yale College: From Its Foundation, A.D. 1700, to the Year 1838

Ebenezer Baldwin - 1841 - 370 pages
...education ; but to commence a thorough course, and to carry it as far as the time of the students' residence here will allow. It is intended to maintain...languages alone, or mathematics alone, or natural or political science alone. The object, in the proper collegiate department, is not to teach that which...
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The Yale Literary Magazine, Volume 8

1843 - 582 pages
...nor on the other hand, to give a superficial ;ducation, containing a little of almost every thing ; nor to finish the details of either a professional...languages alone, or mathematics alone, or natural or political science alone. The object, in the proper collegiate department is not to teach that which...
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The History and Topography of the United States of America, Volume 1

John Howard Hinton - 1850 - 1008 pages
...education, it is necessary that all the important faculties be brought into exercise. When certain menial endowments receive a much higher culture than others,...languages alone, or mathematics alone, or natural or political science alone. The object, in the proper collegiate department is not to teach that which...
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Catalogue of the Officers and Students in Yale College

Yale University - 1851 - 574 pages
...residence here will allow. It is intended to maintain such a proportion between the different branchesof literature and science, as to form a proper symmetry...languages alone, or mathematics alone, or natural or political science alone. The object, in the proper collegiate department, is not to teach that which...
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Report on Collegiate Education: Made to the Trustees of the University of ...

University of Alabama. President, Basil Manly - 1852 - 72 pages
...proper symmetry and balance of character. In laying the foundation of a thorough education," they say, "it is necessary that all the important faculties...languages alone, or mathematics alone, or natural or political science alone. The object, in the proper collegiate department, is not to teach that which...
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Journal of the Historical and Philosophical Society of ..., Volume 1, Issue 1

Cincinnati Historical Society - 1872 - 152 pages
...the presence of their instructors. In laying the foundation of a thorough education, it is thought necessary that all the important faculties be brought...culture than others, there is a distortion in the mental character. The powers of the mind are not developed in their fairest proportions by studying...
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Memories of Yale Life and Men, 1845-1899

Timothy Dwight - 1903 - 620 pages
...education; but to commence a thorough course, and to carry it as far as the time of the student's residence will allow. It is intended to maintain such a proportion...languages alone, or mathematics alone, or natural or political science alone. The object, in the proper collegiate department, is not to teach that which...
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