Word: seen
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...Monday next, April 15, "A Trip to Chinatown," conceded to be one of Hoyt's cleverest pieces of work will begin a two weeks' engagement at the Tremont Theatre. The only changes made in the piece since it was last seen here are the songs, dances, etc., and the costuming, which will be entirely new. The leading roles will be assumed by Harry Conor, the original Well and Strong; Geraldine McCann, who will appear as the dashing young widow; Harry Gilfoil, the famous whistling soloist, who takes the part of the waiter, and George Richards, who will be seen...
...feels in this subject is shown by the favorable reception given to "Harvard by an Oxonian." If an account of the University by a stranger has proved so acceptable, how much greater would be the interest in a course of lectures by some of the men who have themselves seen Harvard as she was in the old times, and have lived in constant and intimate association with her history and traditions. Such men, and there are plenty of them, could give us some account not only of historical occurrences, but of the college life itself...
...Sargent's new game, which has been named holeball, has been played every evening this week. It has aroused much interest, not only among the men who have played it, but also among those who have seen it. The game has been played by about twenty-four men, although this number can be increased or diminished without any trouble...
...machine which has been constructed, is now in the new Engineering building, but it has been seen by very few men. It was constructed by Professor Hollis, not only for its possible practical value to rowing interests but also for its scientific interest to the students in engineering...
...most brilliant are in secluded nooks or cling as epiphytes to the higher branches of the loftiest trees, well out of sight. And lastly, there is nothing in the tropics which can compare with the ever fresh surprise of the miracle of spring, even as it is seen in our austere and whimsical New England. Our plants, growing under such severe conditions, are well worth studying just as examples of organisms which have endured the hardest of all times...