Word: respectely
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...Cambridge on the following evening. The cast will be nearly the same as at the first representation of the play. The costumes will be entirely new and the ballet will be made one of the features of the productions. There is sufficient time for thorough preparation. In every respect the performance promises to be successful...
...crew have been of no avail, and Mr. Keyef has given the verdict that his other work has greater need for him and a more imperative call upon him than the training of the 'varsity crew. We know not what Mr. Keyes's other work may be, and we respect his judgment in deciding which calling has the greater demand upon him. At the same time we cannot help wondering what call can be more loud than that of the university crew at this present moment and all through this spring. Half of the crew is composed...
...passage is made so attractive that man is impelled toward it by an inward sense, his entrance is not left to mere chance. There is in each of us a tendency toward right or if not a tendency toward it, at least a respect for it, which impels us to that being who is the highest expression of right...
...errors, all by the infield, is pretty nearly a record, even for a class game, and their batting, with the exception of Mackie's three-bagger, and Hapgood's clean base-hit which followed it, bringing in the only earned run of the game, was woefully weak. In one respect however, they out-played the freshmen, for they put snap and life, even into their errors, while '95, though they played a clean game, did not play with snap, except at the rarest intervals...
...loyalty-compelling practice be made general? Why should not the freshman when he enters college be more forcibly reminded of Harvard's honor-roll for the past two hundred years? Why should not the names of the Harvard men of years gone by who today challenge our enthusiastic respect and admiration cling to the old rooms they occupied in college, or peer at us familiarly from their chiseled resting-place on the corner of one of the college buildings...