Word: knowing
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...which is thoroughly admirable. We heartily agree with him that the strong sentiment of the College against the action of the Faculty should find expression; but we can hardly believe that the Faculty have been so unpardonably blind as to mistake even gentlemanly acquiescence for approval. They must know that they have entered upon a course which is condemned by the judgment of the entire undergraduate body and by a very large number graduates. Though they deliberately disregard the opposition which their action excites, they can not be unconscious of it. At any rate we see no very satisfactory...
...taking the part of the Ghost. The character of Hamlet itself was first interpreted to our knowledge by Burbage, who could scarcely have been very pleasing, for we are told that he was fat and scant of breath. The next great Hamlets of the past that we know anything of are Betterton, Garrick and Kemble; but even though we have much to tell us how these actors looked and how they played their parts, we cannot get a very distinct impression of their impersonations. Actors are like the visions in Macbeth who "come like shadows, so depart." The best criticism...
...silence that, before the outside world, and especially in the eyes of our own graduates, gives the lie to all that we have professed in the past, of love for the game of football and loyalty to the athletic interests of Harvard? I mention the graduates because I know that a great many of them are anxious to get an expression of undergraduate sentiment on the matter. If there is a single, faint glimmer of hope for football at Harvard, it lies in an emphatic expression of opinion from a large number of graduates, both old and young...
Attention is especially called to the annual dinner of the main Latin School Association, which consists of all graduates of the school, to be held Friday, March 29, at the Parker House. Probably few, even among graduates of the school, know how many prominent Boston men have attended the Latin School, or how notable an event the annual dinner is becoming. All who can attend should send their names today to G. R. Nutter, 220 Devonshire, Boston...
...committee on arrangements for the junior dinner ask that all members of the junior class who intend to attend the dinner sign the blue book at Leavitt's as soon as possible. It will greatly facilitate the arrangements of the committee if they can know within the next three days approximately the number of men who intend to be present, and all men who sign immediately will confer a great favor upon the committee...