Word: regarded
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...which is that one continuous central theme shall run through the entire curriculum and that all other subjects shall be made merely supplementary to this. Mr. Green then disscussed the views of several advocates of the system and at the close of his talk questions from the audience in regard to the subject were answered by the lecture...
...rule adopted by the Athletic Committee with regard to the use of the "H" meets a long-felt want and will please all who are interested in athletics. It will do away with the abuse of this mark of athletic distinction, and will be a strong incentive to men who are trying for the different teams. Especially should this be true with the Mott Haven Team, since only those who win points may now wear the "H," while before this any member of the Team was entitled to the letter. It is expected that the men trying for the different...
...played a regular game with two goals yesterday on Holmes Field, for the first time this season. Some of the defense work was weak, but on the whole the playing was good, and gives promise of a successful season. No word has as yet been received from Princeton in regard to the challenge for a game...
Both Wrightington and Dean spoke somewhat seriously about Harvard spirit in athletics, and also denied most emphatically the charge sometimes made that there has ever been favoritism shown in the selection of Harvard teams. Both men regretted that not enough interest is shown by the students in regard to the daily practice, and that some men who might be useful as candidates feel no sense of duty about coming out to do their share toward improving the teams. Both captains asked for a hearty support from the University and expressed their confidence of turning out winning teams if this were...
...With regard to Burns's place in literature, Mr. Copeland thought it profitable-instead of dwelling, as so many critics have done, upon what Burns did not accomplish in poetry-to note and cherish what he did accomplish. This divides itself easily into two classes-first such remarkable geure pictures of the life of the people as "The Jolly Beggars," "Halloween," and a dozen other vigorous examples; and second those keen, sweet songs in which the passions of patriotism, of drink, above all of love, are expressed with a perfectness and a concentration unequalled in modern literature...