Word: heralds
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1880-1889
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Saturday's Herald contained a column and a half report of Mr. Herkomer's lecture here Friday evening...
...many of those who are fortunate enough to become members of them are obliged to go to heavy expense in the way of fees and assessments. This plan for a university club is by no means a new one, in fact, the matter was discussed in the old Harvard Herald some few years ago. Yet the project has many points to commend it to favorable deliberation. For instance, by forming a club of this kind with a large membership, a small assessment fee would be amply sufficient to provide many desirable features of club life, such as a good reading...
Some one has introduced a game of "base-ball with cards," but it will never become popular. The umpire is never killed in such a game, and the players are not carried off the field with broken limbs. - Norristown Herald...
Cycling, so dull at Harvard College last season as to be virtually dead, will be worse than ever in 1886. The members take no interest in the affairs of the club, and but one cyclist is in training for the races at Mott Haven. - Boston Herald...
Four years ago then, the "Crimson," the "Herald," and the "Advocate" often covered the same ground in the editorial and item departments. The "Lampoon," "Advocate," and "Crimson" frequently had articles similar in character, the "Crimson" and "Advocate" being very much alike. It was plain that some process of differentiation was necessary. Accordingly in the fall of 1883, the "Herald" and the "Crimson" combined under the title "Herald-Crimson," afterward CRIMSON. This new paper differed little from the "Herald." Moreover, the "Advocate" has slowly changed, by giving less space to current events, leaving such things to the daily paper. It also...