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...that sum. In any case, Sarah's return to Paris will be a great event. It will be curious to see what effect her travels will have had upon her talent and her golden voice, and whether, as the foreign critics say, she has become Americanized in her style of acting, or her London marriage with M. Damala, a Greek, has made her more classic...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: DRAMATIC AND MUSICAL. | 4/17/1882 | See Source »

...Review would seem to wish to have us do. That would be manifestly absurd, and we refuse to be cajoled into such a course, even by the staid Review. The Review treats of this whole question with so much patriotic ardor and industry and so much native vigor of style, that we are, after all, inclined to admire its work, even though it be done at our own expense. Such force and intelligence as the Review often displays, will go far to advance outside opinion of the intellectual condition of the students at Oberlin College, which the illiberal and often...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 4/14/1882 | See Source »

...offence. Some years ago on the publication of "Plutarch's Morals," done into English by several hands and edited by Prof. Goodwin, the Saturday Review, without regard to preface or title-page, first criticised the distribution of the work into several hands, and next the consequent diversity of style. Unfortunately for the reviewer the book was made up of old translations in new clothes, and the good men who labored on it were beyond the reach of the Saturday Review. That the German indexer should catalogue the book as - "Plutarch's Morals," edited by W. W. Goodwin, translated...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 4/12/1882 | See Source »

...states that there is some prospect of the formation of a canoe club at New Haven this spring, and in commending the project it says: "There are canoes enough in college, but any sport to be enjoyable must be companionable, and it is not strange that the old individual style of canoeing fails to arouse a lasting-interest. Recent experiments and improvements in canoe sailing have introduced an entirely new phase of the sport, and removed a vast deal of unnecessary labor. We hear every summer of the pleasant cruises of countless clubs, yet nothing has ever been done here...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 4/12/1882 | See Source »

...Student describes the proposed new gymnasium at Amherst as follows: "It is to be fitted up with apparatus very much after the style of that in the gym recently built at Harvard. The plans for the building are to have one story and a large basement. The first floor is to be a room 100 feet by 70 feet, with a circular gallery at one end, besides a space for the regular marching and dumb bell exercises. It is to have all the modern appliances for gymnastics and physical exercise. The basement is to contain regular bath rooms, a spray...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 4/1/1882 | See Source »

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