Word: cheered
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...will encourage them immensely if a large crowd assembles to give them a good send-off. The barges will draw up in front of Leavitt and Peirce's. Every man who can possibly do so should be on hand a few minutes before the time of leaving to cheer his best for Harvard's baseball players...
...what is needed is a body of regularly appointed undergraduates whose duty it will be to lead the cheering at the baseball contests, not only at the larger ones, but at every game that the team plays here. The crowd is always ready and willing to cheer if someone will lead it, but no one seems willing to undertake the responsibility of leading. Why not, then, have the baseball management appoint men to lead cheering, as they now appoint the ushers? The men who are chosen for this important service will not look upon it as a hardship, if they...
...they were twenty years ago. It has to be forced out of them now, for they seem unwilling to give it the whole-heartedness they used to. Men now have to be urged to come out and try for the teams, and to go to the games and cheer their representatives in the athletic field...
...closing, the lecturer said that much can be forgiven a man who loves as Whitman did. While temporary evil may result from his poems, it will finally be overshadowed and obliterated by the good. His better side will long live to bless, ennoble and cheer the hearts...
...latest addition to the list of small magazines has just issued from the University Press. It is called the "Shadow." Unlike the rest of its order, it seems to come before the world with an honest literary purpose, and not merely to scoff and to cheer. The first number is bright and intellectual without being "dicadent." As to outer appearance the "Shadow" is simple, rather artistic, and attractive, with a classical cover and good typography. The price is ten cents a copy; published monthly...