Word: never
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1880-1889
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
These courses cover valuable fields of knowledge which heretofore have been little traversed, except by special students. The King James version of the Bible, in particular, has never received the attention to which its peculiar literary merits entitle it. An attempt has been made to convince the public that as a translation it is a poor and inadequate piece of work. That question it is not worth while here to discuss; but it still bids fair to remain among the imperishable classics of our tongue. For its extraordinary merits as a piece of English place it above the rank...
After the unjust criticisms of Yale's treatment of her visitors last Saturday which appeared in the Harvard press, the actions of the Harvard crowd Wednesday were indeed surprising. Never did a crowd try harder or use worse methods to rattle a team. If Harvard men wish to have any reputation for fairness and justness, let them "practice what they preach." - Yale News...
...took occasion to criticise the unseemly conduct of the spectators at the Yale-Harvard game in New Haven; nothing, it seems to me, could have been much more unseemly than the "muckerish" conduct of the men on Holmes Field yesterday. During a six years residence in Cambridge I have never seen its equal for ungentlemanliness, and hope never to again. As long as possible I tried to excuse the conduct of the men, laying it to freshness and over-enthusiasm; but when the crowd resorted to jeering the players of the other side in order to cause them to drop...
...sound that the orchestra produced was exceptionally fine. The march was played with great snap, the time being well preserved throughout. The quieter movement of the trio was given with force and taste. The bass did very good work in their exacting part. In general the Pierian has never done better in anything than in its rendering of this selection...
...expected from college men. The Yale nine treated the Harvard team courteously. and it is to be regretted that as much cannot be said of the spectators. The umpiring was simply absurd. The man seemed wholly unfit for his position. Harvard will protest him, and Mr. Fulmer will probably never have an opportunity to umpire another game in the College League. Both teams suffered from his decisions, but Harvard was by far the greater sufferer, His decisions on balls and strikes, and his base decisions were equally bad. Up the last half of the sixth innings, the game was intensely...