Word: among
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...Glee Club will have its annual dinner at Taft's, Point Shirley, this evening. On Wednesday evening, the club will sing in Music Hall at the "pop" concert. Among other things, a waltz song with orchestral accompaniment will be sung...
...gain for them. His sympathy, his cordiality, his readiness to help when advice has been asked of him have drawn to him the love and respect of all the students. We cannot say farewell to Dr. Hale without the deepest regret. The work he has accomplished in the past among us has told on the side of good order, and the loss occasioned by his absence must be great. His work in the pulpit and among the students has always been of an eminently practical nature. He has had always in mind the great temptation which must necessarily assail...
...Moody's third annual Summer School for Bible Study will be held at Northfield, Mass., from June 30 to July 15. Among the speakers who are to be present are Rev. A. McKenzie, D. D., of Cambridge, and Professor W. R. Harper of Yale. There will be accommodations for one thousand students and the number present will probably reach that figure. The N. E. railroad offer reduced rates of two cents per mile each way to groups of five for continuous passage from any one point, good until July 27th in returning...
...also most important to have one of our countrymen who is versed not only in Egyptology and in the recent 'results,' but who is personally acquainted with our work in situ. Mr. Griffith, the English student, has, in two or three seasons of work, attained an enviable place among archaelogical explores, and his investigations at the British Museum, in connection with our discoveries in Egypt, are of great value, as witness his letter in the Times of May 22 touching the statue of 'Joseph's Pharaoh' found by him and Naville at Bubastis in April. Our museums need an American...
...probable formation of an interscholastic foot-ball league among several of the leading schools of Boston, is certainly a step in the right direction. One great disadvantage in the past to all city schools has been the fact that the students had not such opportunities for out-door sports and recreations as the members of the large boarding schools and academies. It is, of course, in the nature of things that this comparative disadvantage will always exist, but it can be greatly lessened if a stronger interest in foot-ball and base-ball games springs up among the city schools...