Word: styling
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...given last night in Sanders Theatre by Professor Lanciani of the University of Rome. Although an Italian by birth and as he himself expressed it "a stranger in a strange land," yet Prof. Lanciani's: pronunciation and command of the English language was surprisingly good, and his easy, graceful style showed that he was entirely at home with his subject. After a brief introduction by Prof. Norton, Prof. Lanciani spoke substantially as follows: The subjects I have selected for these lectures are all pertaining to the Archaeology of Rome, which is considered the "mater et caput" of the antiquarian world...
...America on their own grounds, surrounded by hundreds of enthusiastic supporters, and yet it was able to hold their score down to two goals, gained in the first half hour of the play before the Harvard men were able to become accustomed to the field and to the Princeton style of play, which is, in truth, very different from that of the teams in the neighborhood of Boston...
...lack of precision of some of the performers, the second number was well given and deserved more applause than fell to its share. The Largo of Haendel was also very well played, the solo part being taken by Mr. Kneisel and rendered in rather too mechanical and unsympathetic a style. Mr. Gericke did not respond to the encore given to the piece. The fourth Symphony of Beethoven was very well played and was the most satisfactory number on the programme. All the delicate nuances were rigidly observed. In the second Adagio movement the quality of tone of the whole orchestra...
...unaccompanied by any statistics showing the in corresponding depression of the college for the first two hundred and forty-nine years of its birth, till, now that '90 has come and is not so very much fresher than other freshman classes, she has felt relieved enough to celebrate in style. This transparency also pathetically inquired "Where was '89 on Bloody Monday Night?" And apparently answered it to their own satisfaction...
...latter proved easy victors. This kind of playing must be stopped at once, and we believe Mr. Slocum means to stop it. Meanwhile all men who have given up trying for the eleven, ought to continue practising hard, for, unless three men in the rush line adopt a different style of playing, there ought to be three vacancies in the eleven very soon, - and these must be filled (or retained) by men who have shown themselves worthy to do so. The whole eleven, in fact, must brace, and brace very hard; but the flagrant cases ought to be remedied...