Word: interestingly
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...debate in the meeting of this conference, and to include beside athletics such questions as the marking and examination systems, scholarship and college discipline, presents a still more hopeful prospect. The success of this conference, however, is not by any means assured. It must be kept alive by steady interest and earnest work on the part of the students. Subjects must be presented in definite forms, and thoughtful arguments and careful words of criticism advanced. Let the students accept this boon with a resolution to make the most of it, and nothing but good can follow...
...base-ball interest in the college has, perhaps, never before been so strongly manifested as it is this year. This is shown clearly enough by the fact that eleven nines, comprising over 100 players, entered for the cups offered by the CRIMSON. Add to these the men comprising the 'Varsity and second nines, as well as the players upon the four class teams, and we have a total of over 150 men engaged in regular practice. Yet, this aggregate makes no account of the various "table" and "society" teams-nor of the two nines of Memorial Hall wait ers. This...
...novelty to have a woman speaking in Sanders Theatre. Mrs. Livermore, we believe, is to be the first woman who has ever spoken there, nay, even the first who has ever thus publicly addressed a Harvard assembly. The lecture to-night, therefore, will be of twofold interest, and we think and hope that the college will be well represented in the audience...
...Field. These improvements, coming one by one in the last two years, have as a whole been very numerous and exceedingly effective; they have made of what used to be a by no means beautiful spot, a place that must now become one of the centres toward which all interest in Harvard is directed. A view of Holmes from any quarter must have a charm for every one, even the foremost indifferent and insensible. The surrounding buildings, all full of interest and some of them true monuments of Harvard's success and greatness, the crimson-uniformed nine in the centre...
...arrested motion can convey the idea of motion. There are fourteen of these illustrations, representing the horse running, trotting, cantering, jumping, etc. Col. Dodge has succeeded in giving much excellent advice on the management of a horse, while at the same time holding the reader's attention by the interest of the narrative. Tom, the companion of the author on many of his rambles, is a Harvard student who is just taking his first lessons in horsemanship, and it is through advice given him that much valuable knowledge is conveyed to the reader.- (Price, $3.00; Houghton, Mifflin...