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Word: rose (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1880-1889
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...site of this theatre was not known. The greatest share of the credit of its discovery and subse quent excavation is due to the Germans. The theatre is at the southeastern extremity of the Acropolis. It was constructed on the plan employed in all Greek theatres; the seats rose in semi-circular tiers from the orchestra as a converging point, and at the back of the orchestra, facing the seats was the building set apart for the actors. The dimensions of the theatre were very large; it would doubtless accomodate the whole body of Athenian citizens...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Professor J. W. White's Lecture. | 4/16/1889 | See Source »

...feature of the Atlantic Monthly for April is the poem written by Oliver Wendell Holmes read at the dinner in honor of James Russell Lowell's seventieth birthday. It has all of Dr. Holmes' grace and felicity of expression. "Passe Rose" Mr. Hardy's interesting serial is concluded in this number, also Miss Bellamy's "Hannah Collinse's Jim." There are several interesting essays on history and politics-among which are the "The People in Government" by H. C. Merwin, "Why our Science Students go to Germany" by S. Sheldon and "A French Bishop of the Fifteenth Century...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The April Atlantic. | 3/28/1889 | See Source »

...Atlantic Monthly for March is fully up to the standard of the recent numbers in the variety and interest of its articles. The serials, "Passe Rose," by A. S. Hardy, and "The Tragic Muse," by Henry James, fully sustain the interest of their first chapters. American history occupies a large share of the number. John Fiske contributes a paper on "Ticonderoga, Bennington and Oriskany," and Frank G. Cook, one on "Some Colonial Lawyers and their Work." Treating in more recent events is an article entitled "Personal Reminisences of William H. Seward," by his private secretary, Samuel J. Barrows...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Atlantic Monthly for March. | 2/28/1889 | See Source »

...Ludington, '87. The investigation covers the last twenty years and is based on an exhaustive mathematical computation of the marks received. The average standing of 1003 non-athletic men during the decade ending in 1878 was 2.65 on a scale of 4. During the next ten years it rose to 2.69 for 1227 men. The record of 101 athletic students during the first decade was 2.55. The averages of the members of the various university teams were as follows: Crew, first decade, 2.56, second decade, 2.52. Nine, first decade, 2.59; second decade, 2.40. Football eleven, first decade, 2.51; second decade...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Effect of Athletics on Scholarship. | 2/2/1889 | See Source »

...February Atlantic Monthly is a very attractive number because of the variety and interest of its articles. Of the serials, "Passe Rose" by A. S. Hardy, fully keeps up the interest of the earlier chapters. This bids fair to be one of the best novels of the year. The second installment of Henry James', "The Tragic Muse," is written with all his usual artistic taste. It is too soon to judge of the story as a whole, but the beginning is surely auspicious. Shorter stories are "A Winter Courtship," by Miss Jewett, who is well known as a writer...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The February Atlantic. | 1/31/1889 | See Source »

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