Word: attempt
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...work there do so at more or less risk of catching colds. There is no way effectually to do away with this dampness within a reasonable cost, and we suspect that the baseball players will be forced to stand it the rest of this season. An attempt has been made to carry on the practice of the batteries in some warmer place, but no fit place can be found. The baseball men lay great store by the practice they get during the winter, so that it is a matter of no small moment that they are obliged to work under...
...Oedipus Tyrannus given now nearly eleven years ago. The results of that presentation were in all respects beneficial. A wonderful interest in Greek literature was awakened, and students were enabled to pursue their students with a better conception of the real conditions. It would be most praiseworthy to attempt, at least, the production of another classic play, and if the attempt were successful it would help those taking Greek courses and make a grate number of people more familiar with the classic authors...
...received. This was that a Bible class would probably be started, to meet at the room in Grays every Sunday afternoon, and the names of the members who wished to join were called for. The attendance at the regular meetings has, of late, been so slight, that an attempt will probably be made to arouse a little more enthusiasm by having regular visits made to the sailors in the harbor, or by doing work elsewhere in the city; but the quickest way of increasing the attendance would be to have each member who is in the habit of coming...
...importance. Harvard is represented by Mr. A. De V. Tassin, '92. A prize of ten dollars will be awarded each month for the best contribution on some subject of college life or work. We wish the College Man all success. WE cannot, however, fail to remember that every previous attempt at conducting an intercollegiate magazine has ended in mournful failure. It is at least questionable whether a field exists for such a publication. The College Man has an excellent opportunity to triumph over skeptics, and to show us that the repeated failures and final abandonment of the Collegian were...
...would also inaugurate a new and most dangerous policy, for the college is now asked for the first time to cut off a part of its best education to regain time which has been worse than wasted in the lower schools, while there is no hint of any attempt to strike at the real cause of our delays in education. We feel, indeed, that the consequences of the proposed step would be so momentous to the welfare of this and other colleges, and to the whole community, that it ought not to be taken without the hearty and almost unanimous...