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...Thurman, and Sherman...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: WHICH SHALL IT BE? | 2/6/1880 | See Source »

...POLITICAL canvass of the Law School gives the following result: Proportion of Republican votes, 58 per centum; of Democratic votes, 42 per centum. On the presidential question: for Bayard, 38 per centum; Sherman, 14 per centum; Grant, 10 per centum; Edmunds, 7 per centum; Blaine, 7 per centum; Hayes, 6 per centum; Evarts, 6 per centum; "anti-Grant," 6 per centum; scattering, 6 per centum. The polls were open for a week, and hard work was done for Grant...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: BREVITIES. | 1/9/1880 | See Source »

...Humason, Hunt, Huse, Jane, Kenefick, Keys, Kimball, Lamson, Latham, Legate, Leland, LeMoyne, Lovering, Loring, Lowell, Lynde, Macauley, Martin, Merriam, Metivier, Millet, Minot, Morrell, Morris, Morse, Nash, Nichols, O'Callaghan, Ogden, Page, Parker, Parmenter, Patton, Perrin, Pierce, Prior, Richards, Richardson, Roberts, Roby, Rollins, Rountree, Rusk, Russell, Ryder, Sargent, Sawyer, Seamans, Sherman, Shippen, Sloane, Smiley, A. E. Smith, D. E. Smith, F. W. Smith, Sprague, Starr, Stetson, Stiles, Stone, Stringham, Strobel, G. N. Swift, L. Swift, Sykes, F. H. Taylor, W. R. Taylor, Thomas, Tiffany, Tillinghast, Tower, Twombly, Tyler, Underwood, Wakefield, Wallace, Warren, Wellington, Wells, Wendell, West, Wetmore, F. G. Wheeler...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: DEGREES CONFERRED. | 7/3/1877 | See Source »

...Nation said, it is to a great degree a question of feeling, and we must remember feeling has changed since then. We have gone along with marvellous strides in the last two years. Celebrations like that on the 17th of last June, and speeches like those of General Sherman and Fitzhugh Lee, have materially altered our feelings towards the South. The Nation's language was, therefore, the language of 1874, prompted by feeling rather than by reason, as it confesses. Now, in 1876, feeling as well as reason would sustain it in speaking otherwise...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: AN INCONSISTENCY. | 3/10/1876 | See Source »

Several of the crew on that day were extremely worn by their late exertions on the river, and were indisposed for rowing. The usual noon pull had been dispensed with, and in the evening Hooker, acting as coxswain, coached Sherman and Cameron in the Sophomore pair-oar. They pulled up stream as far as the toll-bridge on Morgan Street, where, about six o'clock, the swell of a tug-boat, passing at some distance from them, caused the water to wash over the bow of the boat, and gradually filled it through holes in the canvas. The oarsmen, having...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 6/18/1875 | See Source »

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