Word: materalized
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...walk with prouder step and more erect heads; and if ever in the course of the pressing duties of life the graduates lose something of their close connection to the college, such events serve to renew the bonds and unite them all in reverent devotion for the Alma Mater...
...Rocky Mountain Harvard Club held its fifth annual dinner Wednesday evening, the 28th. Before the banquet there was a short business meeting, when Mr. W. H. Smiley, '77, was elected president, and Rev. S. A. Eliot, '84, secretary. Mr. Eliot responded to the toast "Alma Mater." Other toasts were: "Proctors of Yore," "College Widows," "Colorado in Harvard and Harvard in Colorado," "The Medical School," and "Harvard in Literature." In replying to "Harvard Athletics," D. H. B. Whitney said that he should send his son not to the college that has gained the most victories, but to the college that gave...
...Last year the benefit accrued, and was intended to accrue to the graduates rather than to the college or the members of the Glee club. Those to whom the treat was rarest were Harvard graduates who found it both pleasant and profitable to renew their associations with their Alma Mater, if but for a single evening. They are thereby entitled to recognition, if the Glee club are not; and it is as much on their account as on the account of the Glee club itself that we believe the action of the faculty a mistake. It seems a little like...
...next Wednesday evening. The selections will include "Schneides Band," "Drill Tarriers," "Boating Song," "Courtship," "Three Glasses," "Estudiantina Waltzes," ',Man in the Moon," "Imogene Donahue," "Drinking Medley," and "Fair Harvard." This evening's programme includes the "Fra Diavola" "Ruy Blas," and "Poet and Peasant" overture, selections from Rossini's Stabat Mater" and "Chassaigue's Folka," some "Tannhauser" reminiscences, waltzes by Strauss and Waldteufel, the "Arion Carnival March," and other brilliant numbers...
...turn of those branches of learning-of philology, literature, philosophy, political economy, history, mathematics, and music-for the very existence of which the reading-room in Gore Hall is a necessity, to call upon Harvard's many and kind friends to come to the aid of their alma mater and to present her with a reading-room such as she deserves, such as the ever-increasing number of her students demands, such as the present poor accommodations render an obvious necessity. We concur with President Eliot in his statement that such a call for a sufficient sum of money...