Word: liking
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...number of men apart from those training with any athletic team who wish to exercise in the gymnasium in the afternoon has become so large that there is not nearly enough individual apparatus to supply them. This fact and a feeling that many men would like to join classes in which an afforded for regular systematic training, under the direction of an instructor, was offered, has lead Dr. Sargent to start two classes. One class in Free Movements and Light Gymnastics, will meet at 4.45 every week day but Saturday and will have the right to the floor from...
...second class, in Heavy Gymnastics, that is, Ladders, Horizontal and Parallel Bars, Rings, Tumbling, etc., will meet at 12 o'clock. To accommodate those who would like to join this class but who could not come at this hour, some other hour may be arranged, very likely in the evening...
...such a class as was suggested by a correspondent in the CRIMSON a few days ago. It will afford an opportunity for regular and systematic training to those who are not working with the the class and 'varsity teams or with the other regular squads but who would like to take exercise in company and under the direction of an instructor or leader. The authorities at the gymnasium have acted in this matter with commendable promptness. No sooner was the desire for more instruction on the floor of the gymnasium expressed than steps were taken to provide...
...Norah's Excuse" is a life-like reminiscence told in the Irish dialect. No blame certainly attaches to a man who is not a master of dialect and who does not pretend to be. It is the writer who attempts to use a dialect which he has not thoroughly mastered who lays himself open to just criticism. And assuredly the substitution of "i" for "e," and the occasional use of "me" for "my" do not constitute good Irish dialect, - the author of "Norah's Excuse" to the contrary, not withstanding. A study of the masters of the Irish dialect...
Certitudes like these are always reliances and are never lost in fogs of perplexity or doubt. They are known and always known...