Word: naming
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Dates: during 1870-1879
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...voice of the Glee Club is heard in the Chapel," - at least the ear of faith is supposed to have detected its presence there. But why, in the name of all that is musical, must we be afflicted with such a rendering of Coronation as was given in Appleton one morning last week? Let our Glee Club extend their acquirements by the mastering of such difficult music as Coronation and Old Hundred...
AFTER our failure to secure the publication of the Magenta Indices and Title-Page at the early date formerly announced, we will now make no promises, but say simply that we hope to name the date of their publication in our next issue...
...high principle, but weak-minded, under the pressure of circumstances, reaches a high position through the crimes of himself and his son, suffering afterwards the tortures of a guilty conscience. In the "Deformed Transformed," Arnold, a hunchback, sells his soul to the Devil, who takes the name of Caesar; his noble spirit, however, obtains him glory, and he retires from the play with a love he wins at the point of the sword...
...more cultivated classes of society. It is true such writing pleases the majority of people, but in college the greater number of the students make some pretension to culture, while outside it is the cultured who are in the minority. A humorous article to be worthy of the name must be well carried out, and unless those who attempt to write them have considerable experience they cannot expect to succeed. Doubtless, many not connected with the University take more interest in these humorous productions than the undergraduates themselves, simply because they suppose that these articles apply to some circumstances, some...
...Turners, to be given in Boston during the last two weeks of April. We understand that the preparations are nearly completed, and in our next number we shall hope to give full particulars as to the place of the collection, its time of opening, and so forth. Turner's name is familiar to many in this country through the books of Mr. Ruskin; but our opportunity of studying his work by the light of Modern Painters has been restricted to a sight of the Slave Ship in New York, and of such sketches as have been engraved separately...