Word: brightly
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1890-1899
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...straight forward style. With most of them we agree, but the one dealing with the "refusal of a local barber to shave a member of the University" is a rather flippant treatment of a serious subject. The "College Kodaks" which in this number follow the editorials are unusally bright. There are only three of them, but none falls flat and the second is really a very good story. "The Man in White and the Man in Black," the first story of the number is by Arthur C. Train '96. Like his former work this is excellent. Train's work...
...calendar, the day on which they meet their former class mates once again and renew, perhaps for the last time, those bonds of fellowship which death alone can sever. The happy Senior, however, turns instinctively towards Class Day as his day of days. The soft air of June, the bright and happy faces of his fair friends, the countless throng of visitors, the magic-like appearance of the yard, all combine to form a picture which though years will soon efface, affords for the moment the fullest enjoyment...
...Princeton thoroughly outplayed them at every point and her victory was clearly earned. It is not because our nine failed to win that the college will pass harsh judgment on their work, but because they lost the game in so discreditable a way. The freshmen started the season with bright prospects, with material much above the average. Yet it has failed utterly to accomplish its end. This failure is a striking example of what may result from too loose organization among freshman teams. It is hard to make a body of men in the first year at college realize what...
...wretched exhibition of ball-playing was given on Jarvis yesterday by the senior and junior nines. Unless the men on class teams will take more pains to practice, the future of baseball here at least in the class games, is not very bright. Yesterday's exhibition was not a ball game, it was a farce...
...College Kodaks" are very good, best of all is the fourth. The second and the last are the poorest. "The Artistic Temperament" by Townsend Walsh is one of the best things of the number. It is a story of a troup of wandering actors and is told in a bright and entertaining style. "The Sudden Conversion of Deacon Enoch Grubb" is rather weak and flat. There is not much of a plot and the form is not good enough to make the story interesting reading. "Reaping Tares" by H. H Chamberlain is a very pretty story. "Sleep...