Word: credits
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...measure due to his popularity among the students, and to the whole-souled interest he has always manifested in their welfare. Beyond this popularity, however, it is due to his recognition throughout the country as a sincere and fearless critic in both art and literature, which inevitably reflects great credit on Harvard and enhances his value in the eyes of Harvard...
Last evening in Sever 11 Mr. Copeland began his course on the English Novelists with a very interesting lecture on Samuel Richardson. Mr. Copeland compared Richardson to Fielding and pointed out that though neither of them could be considered as the beginner of the English novel, the credit of the new opening in literature was due to both of them. He spoke of three methods of writing a novel, the divine method, the reminiscent, and the letter writing method, and showed how Richardson had tried to combine the first two in the last, and how he had failed to make...
...CRIMSON gave on Jan. 4 a review of Dr. Sargent's report on Physical Training, on Jan. 7 a list of colleges where exercise is required and is counted, on Jan. 12 a list of some of the universities and colleges where exercise is required but no credit is given, and on Jan. 18 several institutions where elective courses in physical training are offered, counting towards a degree. Today is given a short account of the work done in the Harvard gymnasium during the Summer School period...
From the spectators point of view the games were ideal, for they went off without a hitch or delay of any kind, reflecting great credit upon the management...
...deeply concerned in all that concerns the honor and credit of Harvard University. It is a sense of personal gratification, whenever I hear that in scholarship, in public life, or in athletics, a foremost stand has been taken by a Harvard man. In athletics or in anything else, so long as something worthy of the honor of Harvard is in a man's keeping, so long as the man who represents Harvard carries with him the feeling that part of Harvard's fame is his, so long as he remembers that the next thing to victory is honorable defeat...