Word: applauding
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...possible to make almost any course in the College interesting. History, even records the day when students in Philos C prolonged their hour for long minutes to applaud the lectures of Professor Wallace Clement Sabine. And failure to be interesting implies failure on the part of the instructor, however much he may choose to disregard the fact...
...General reached the age limit and retired in 1903, after several disagreements, with Mr. Roosevelt. Since then, it has - been the privilege of younger men at" Washington to make the General's acquaintance; and of the public to applaud him on patriotic occasions...
Somewhere between the snow-capped peaks of the Sierras and the swampy everglades of Florida, the producers have found a new musical comedy, one which has not lost the untrammelled bloom of youth. By the very delicacy of its charm, it has escaped the praise of those who applaud only the more obvious successes. It comes unheralded by George M. Cohan or Arthur Hammerstein, for as yet it has not attained that mature development that such prominence demands. "Baby Blue" is a dainty, fragile thing with a few sweet songs and a great deal of light buoyant humor. After...
...might say nere Q. E. D." except that it is absolutely necessary to applaud the work of the several players responsible for the undeniable success of the performance. We lack superlatives and they are dangerous things to fool with, but it is not too much to say that most of the parts could not have been better done. Our old friend Bernard Yedell was perfect as the doctor, and Houston Richards was inimitable as the idea-istic Chub. Miss Hitz., the owner of the "ankle", was at her best, though with not much to do, and Uncle George from Fargo...
Giovanni Martinelli, famed tenor, last week returned to the Metropolitan Opera House, Manhattan, after having been absent, ill with typhoid, for almost three months. When he, as Canio in Pagliacci, drove on the stage in the prescribed donkey-cart, standees, gallery-devils, box-holders interrupted the orchestra to applaud; in a convenient pause, the musicians themselves laid down their flutes, their fiddles, applauded with the audience; when he finished singing the famed aria Vesti la giubba the ovation was taken up again, lasted for five minutes. Martinelli, bowing and bowing, shed tears of gratitude...